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On Dec 3, 6:52*pm, K7ITM wrote:
On Dec 3, 12:25*am, Lostgallifreyan wrote: ( *Richard Feynman lectures) ... I don't know if he's written anything a layman can easily work through, that doesn't come with lots of maths without which accompanying text doesn't help much, but if he has I'll try to read it. I think one of the key things that made his physics lectures popular is that they were delivered without a whole lot of math. *You could get into that if you wanted, but you could also get a lot out of just listening to the _ideas_. If you drop me an email, perhaps I can send you a bit more about this particular lecture... Cheers, Tom That is oh so true! The masters started with an observation of an occurence and not from a rendering of mathematics. With more observations it became natural to align the Universe via mathematics which, as with a jig saw puzzle, fits together nicely., It would seem today that scientists today are using mathematics via a computer to churn out bundles of equations leaving the operator to think of an observation that would fit the math. Of course, mathematics provide imaginary answers similar to a quadratic equation that finish up as multiple of false leads and deductions which eventually requires the multiple use of constants to provide a semblance of understanding of what has been provided. |
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