Mar 17, 2015 - A seemingly comprehensive list of Feynman audio works can be found at The Official Site of Richard Feynman. You can find audio of Feynman lecturing as part. Nearly fifty years have passed since Richard Feynman taught the. With its audio and blackboard photos from Feynman's original lectures, and its links to other.
Godfrey ([email protected]) and Michael A. The records at Caltech indicate that the written version of Feynman’s Nobel Lecture originates from a transcript of the lecture delivered by Feynman at Caltech some time after it was given at the Nobel ceremonies. Copies of the transcript were provided to the Nobel Foundation and to the editors of Science and Physics Today. The Nobel Foundation published the lecture in Les Prix Nobel en 1965, Norstedt, 1966, in Nobel Lectures, Physics, 1963-1970, Elsevier, 1972, and it appears in The Selected Papers of Richard Feynman, World Scientific Press, 2000. In addition, the lecture is posted at the Nobel Foundation web site,. This version of Feynman’s Nobel Lecture was prepared to improve the readability of the text by correcting many small errors that appear in the previously published versions.
Description For more than 30 years, Richard P. Feynman's three-volume Lectures on Physics has been known worldwide as the classic resource for students and professionals alike. Ranging from the most basic principles of Newtonian physics through such formidable theories as Einstein's general relativity, superconductivity, and quantum mechanics, Feynman's lectures stand as a monument of clear exposition and deep insight. This timeless audio serves as a comprehensive library of essential physics by a legend in science.
Volume 1 makes up a beginning course in Quantum Mechanics and includes chapters on basic physics, quantum behavior, the relationship between the wave and particle viewpoints, probability amplitudes, and spin one and spin one-half particles. By JiceF 1960, it is obvious that he didn't know this was going to be published on iTunes (LOL).
This audio skipped several dozen parts that he mentions and a few times it just stopped in mid-sentence and worse yet, the title says Part 1 and it doesn't even start on his first lecture. He is talking while writing on a chalk board and no description of what he is really writing down. I have studied a lot of the things he had talked about so I could keep up with some of it. This was not done for specifically for Audio Book and I think there is a lot of detail that is lost because of it. I listened to this fully two times back to back and although I did get something from it, I feel it is entirely OVER PRICED it is not audiobook quality, nor was it recorded (obviously) for this format.
If you are just after The Feynman Collection and already have a good background knowledge, it may be worth $25. I got more detail from Dr. Quantum 'what the bleep do we know' (but buy the DVD) it goes over some of the stuff Feynman does with a little more up to date intel.