Discover the Power of a Well-Designed Web Page | EFTaylor.com

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the website EFTaylor.com, focusing on the resources available, particularly in relation to physics education and instructional materials. Participants share their perspectives on the value of the content provided on the site.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants highlight that the website contains free and instructional material, with specific mention of the Feynman sum-over-histories as a valuable resource.
  • One participant expresses regret for not discovering the website earlier, noting that they had to create course materials from scratch for a graduate course that could have benefited from the available lecture notes.
  • Another participant acknowledges the quality of the website and expresses intent to read a specific paper in depth.
  • Concerns are raised by one participant regarding the website being perceived primarily as an advertisement for the author's books.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the website's primary purpose, with some seeing it as a valuable educational resource while others perceive it as mainly promotional. No consensus is reached on the overall value of the site.

Contextual Notes

Some claims about the website's content are based on personal experiences and perceptions, which may vary among users. The discussion does not resolve the differing opinions on the website's utility versus its promotional aspects.

Who May Find This Useful

Individuals interested in physics education, instructional materials, and resources for teaching advanced physics topics may find the discussion relevant.

Tyger
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Tyler, what can PF members gain from that website? Looks to me it's just an ad for his books.
 
It has quite a bit

of free and very instructional material that is well presented. The one on the Feynman sum-over-histories is expecially good.

Here's the link to that;

http://www.eftaylor.com/feynman.html
 
Last edited:
I wish I had seen this website 4 years ago. I taught a course from those books (Spactime Physics/Scouting Black Holes) as a grad student and I had to develop it from scratch (it was a new course). Now, here Taylor has a whole set of lecture notes for it. D'oh!
 
Good website. I'll have to read that Feynman sum over paths integral paper in depth when I get a chance.

eNtRopY
 

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