- #1
AdamF
- 34
- 3
I'm having the same problem with nearly every physics textbook that I've come across (no matter which branch, no matter how advanced or basic), and maybe somebody can help:
After nearly every sentence or claim given in a book, I find myself asking..."How did somebody figure this out? How would somebody think to figure this out? How is this measured? Where's the evidence for the author's claim? Is the claim always true? How do we know? What does this actually mean, and why should I care?"
Nearly every single graduate or undergraduate textbook fails those tests significantly more often than it passes, and it feels like a handful of people in the world actually understand where science has been and where it's going while nearly everybody else just pushes some symbols around pages and becomes reasonably proficient at repeating what they are told.
Is there a recommended place to go for some resources (books, courses, otherwise) where physics subjects are taught through tracing the discovery process with emphasis on phenomenology and legitimately supporting the assertions made in the attempt to explain the subject?
For example: Feynaman's explanation of infinity.
After nearly every sentence or claim given in a book, I find myself asking..."How did somebody figure this out? How would somebody think to figure this out? How is this measured? Where's the evidence for the author's claim? Is the claim always true? How do we know? What does this actually mean, and why should I care?"
Nearly every single graduate or undergraduate textbook fails those tests significantly more often than it passes, and it feels like a handful of people in the world actually understand where science has been and where it's going while nearly everybody else just pushes some symbols around pages and becomes reasonably proficient at repeating what they are told.
Is there a recommended place to go for some resources (books, courses, otherwise) where physics subjects are taught through tracing the discovery process with emphasis on phenomenology and legitimately supporting the assertions made in the attempt to explain the subject?
For example: Feynaman's explanation of infinity.