- #1
Thinkaholic
- 19
- 6
Hi. So I’ve been teaching myself mathematics and physics, and over the past year I’ve been buying various textbooks. I’m currently reading Stewart’s “Calculus” (6th edition), “Elements of Set Theory” by Enderton, and “Number Systems and the Foundations of Analysis” by Mendelson, and I’ve been loving all of them. I have a lot of textbooks that I’m waiting to read, but there are some that I bought without being that informed about the said textbooks. For example, I have two Pearson textbooks: “University Physics with Modern Physics” by Young be Freeman, and “Linear Algebra and its Applications” by Lay. I don’t know what to think about these textbooks due to the Pearson thing; does having Pearson as a publisher immediately make a textbook boring and unreadable? Also, I want to know how my physics textbook reading list should go. I will read University Physics first and I’m planning on getting rigorous single-subject (Classical mechanics, E&M, TD, Relativity, QM; etc.) textbooks, but when I read the single subject textbooks, where do I start? I was thinking maybe Goldstien’s book on CM, as I will have learned a lot of higher level math by the time I’m finished with UP, but I don’t know if that’s right.Also, does anybody have any suggestions on how to get through textbooks faster while still learning everything? Seeing as I’m about to be in high school, my schedule will be packed, so I want to be able to read all of these textbooks without taking forever to do so.