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Theory of Relativity (Dover Books on Physics)

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Book Overview

Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958) was one of the 20th-century's most influential physicists. He was awarded the 1945 Nobel Prize for physics for the discovery of the exclusion principle (also called the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent overview of some very basic problems.

This is a pretty doggone good book! The last chapter, especially the last two pages of the text, provides an excellent synopsis of the long standing problem on the structure of matter. It seems that what is left to be done involves the invention or creation of a different mathematical source which is capable of generating a symmetric tensor of rank two that will successfully displace the singularity thru the proper incorporation of the energy tensor, Tuv. This would most certainly shed a new light on the generation of mass and the inherent formation of matter: Form defines Function, Function generates Form. You Betcha!!!

A standard reference written by a lad

I have to correct the review below (which I wrote myself!): Pauli was 22 when he ended his text. I just learned it. I also learned that Einstein was in awe at the excellence of the lad's review of his theory! Read attentively his exposition of Weyl's theory. A few years later Pauli anticipated Yang and Mills in inventing non-abelian gauge theories, a reformulation, in a different context, of Weyl's. He didn't publish a single line, but, when Yang presented his theory in a semminar at Princeton, before Pauli and Einstein, he (Pauli) demonstrated a surprising familiarity with the idea. Perhaps you can find some evidence of it in the notes Pauli added to the second edition. After all, this is one of the greatest pleasures of reading classics!

a great book by a great physicist

This book was intended as a review of the emerging early scientific papers on special and general relativity. This book is not only listing these extremely usefull references, but is also giving a broad historical perspective. The theory, presented in a mathematical way, is somewhat obscured by the lack of any diagrams. You need some background in order to fully appreciate this book.

Please create an audio adaptation ...

To the publisher I would appreciate it if the publisher could produce an audio adaptation of this book. I would love to listen to this while I drive to work and to let my 16 month old son listen to it as a bedtime story. Arnold D Veness

A standard reference written by a teenager!

This is a great classic, still the best reference for historical matters and conceptual questions on special relativity. As for General Relativity it is good but dated. The astonishing thing is that it was written by Wolfgang Pauli when he was nineteen, in 1921, that is 6 years after the publication of the great Einstein paper Foundations of General Relativity. In the fifties a translation into English appeared, together with many comments by the author. The book is a joy to read, if you already had a good introduction to the subject. Otherwise, it is too "adult", as Pauli wrote it with his colleagues in mind, not students. I use to consult it when some conceptual problem is the matter. There is, then, no better place. However, as a text, you have now better ones. The mathematical chapters, in particular, became difficult reading, as differential geometry followed different ways from those predicted by the author.
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