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I read it after taking a modern physics course. As I'm not the brightest bulb in the pack, sometimes I find myself getting lost in the equations.(*)
I was hoping to come away from Heisenberg's book with a little bit better understanding than what I came to it with, namely, the 500ft level understanding that the uncertainty principle makes whole classes of questions unanswerable, so you have to rethink physics in a way that simply doesn't ask those questions. But I was hoping for more.
The course I took briefly mentioned matrix mechanics, stated without evidence or proof that it was mathematically equivalent to Schrodinger's wave mechanics which we did cover in some detail, and obviously since Heisenberg formulated the uncertainty principle it must fall naturally out of his mathematics as well. But I'd like to see how!
(*) And now I'm taking all the math that I should have had the sense to take when I was 20, ( partial differential equations, complex analysis, etc ) and will have another go at QM in a year or two.
What did you think of it?
J.
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