Thomas Thiemann's Book - Is It Worth the Price?

  • Thread starter Jim Kata
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In summary: ChristineI have to respect this. not everybody has what it takes to plow through a book like that.geoffreybotI have to respect this. not everybody has what it takes to plow through a book like that.
  • #1
Jim Kata
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Has anyone taken a look at it yet? I would kind of like to get my grubby hands on it, but I'm not about to shell out $130. Thanks, but no thanks.
 
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  • #2
Jim Kata said:
but I'm not about to shell out $130...

Nor I. And I see the price has gone up.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0521842638/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Earlier Amazon was listing it for $130, I think, but when it actually came out the price posted was $140.

The Cambridge website has more information about the book, including the full Table of Contents.
http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521842631
It looks like it could be a useful book, when institutional libraries have it on the shelf. I'll certainly walk over to the physics library and peruse, but shell out bux for it I'll not.

In case anyone is curious, it has salesrank around #67,000 at the moment. I've seen worse. Despite its whopping price, the book is selling.
 
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  • #3
I have a copy if you have any questions about it. A nice feature is that there are well over two hundred pages devoted to mathematical methods which is quite difficult to find all in one place.
 
  • #4
I have it, it's absolutely amazing and in my opinion worth the price tag. I was going to get it a few months ago but I decided to wait until I got to uni' so that I could use the 15% discount that Cambridge students get on CUP books.
 
  • #5
Are there major differences between the published book and the draft available from the arxiv?

BTW, does someone have information on Kiefer's (also expensive) book?

Thanks,
Christine
 
  • #6
ccdantas said:
Are there major differences between the published book and the draft available from the arxiv?
...

Hopefully Geoff or Perturbation will let us know for sure, but I would expect huge differences since the draft on arxiv is several years old.
In case anyone wants to look I will post the link
http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0110034

this was posted in October 2001 and the arxiv version has not been revised or updated since then. So the actual published version is different by 5 or 6 years

the 2001 draft is 301 pages.

a lot has changed since 2001 and the published version has twice as many pages so I would guess it is totally different
 
  • #7
Hi Marcus,

You're correct; I see now that the preprint has not been updated.
Thanks
Christine
 
  • #8
ccdantas said:
... I see now that the preprint has not been updated.

I sympathize with your dilemma. Book prices can be formidable.
For those of us who are not students at Cambridge, enjoying a 15 percent discount, there is always the hope that the book will be available secondhand for less.

Or that the local campus library will soon have the book available to lend.

From my standpoint, in the USA, part of the price must be due to the declining dollar.

Anyway, it sounds like Geoff and Perturbation are pretty happy with it!
 
  • #9
Hi Marcus,

The book is expensive, yes. But I can purchase it. The problem that I'm facing now is to choose from a huge list of books which one(s) I'll be purchasing for myself as a christmas gift. I must take the opportunity that US$1.00 now is "only" R$1.75 (Brazilian reals).

Christine
 
  • #10
I stumbled upon the book by accident when browsing at the UC Davis Library yesterday when I was trying to buy printer paper. I couldn't hold back, I bought the book and http://angryphysicist.wordpress.com...modern-canonical-quantum-general-relativity/" of it (or what I've read so far, I'm plowing through chapter 4 as we speak).

The content from the introduction to the last page of chapter 33 totals some 774 pages long, 34 pages additionally are used for the bibliography, and to top it off it's hardcover (which is probably why it's so expensive). Personally I prefer hard cover books because they're durable, and most books I have I read many times (I don't have a TV, so I read for enjoyment...so having paperback books is a bad idea since they get well worn fast; for example my copy of Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler's Gravitation is already starting to fall apart after two years of intensive study!).

If you're not a die-hard reader like me, you'll probably want to wait for the paperback version to come out...but this may be a year or two, I don't know how Cambridge University Press works :(
 
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  • #11
Angryphysicist said:
I stumbled upon the book by accident when browsing at the UC Davis Library yesterday when I was trying to buy printer paper. I couldn't hold back, I bought the book and http://angryphysicist.wordpress.com...modern-canonical-quantum-general-relativity/" of it (or what I've read so far, I'm plowing through chapter 4 as we speak).
have to respect this. not everybody has what it takes to plow through a book like that.
I look forward to reading the review at your blog!
 
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  • #12
Loved your review of the book, Angry.

I just don't have the will, mental stamina, mathematical background, and $130 lying around to go out and get that monster.
 
  • #13
staf9 said:
Loved your review of the book, Angry.

I just don't have the will, mental stamina, mathematical background, and $130 lying around to go out and get that monster.
I think you'd find the mental stamina if you were sick and had nothing else to do all day ;)

Heck, my cold is so bad I sleep only a few hours at night. More time to study this fantastic text!

The book is very mathematical, but unlike your average "high level" math textbook Thiemann can actually write in a very engaging manner.

That perhaps saddens me most seeing a math textbook being little more than a grocery list of definitions and theorems. It's so...boring! I don't know about others, but after reading a topology textbook for the first time, my initial response was "So...what? How is this 'open ball' thing useful in anyway? It seems like this author just needed a few extra bucks and decided to write a textbook to get by." (A very smart maneuver for math professors :wink: )

I don't know how, but Thiemann actually makes the math come alive. I would love to meet Dr. Thiemann sometime, he really knows his stuff and can communicate it clearly with ease.

Compare this to another book I got recently: Lectures on Quantum Mechanics by Paul Dirac! For the lazy layperson that hasn't read anything by Dirac, Dirac is notorious for letting the math do the explanation.

(I actually had a T.A. lead my very first calculus section that couldn't speak English, he spoke Chinese. He also had to learn arabic numerals too; it was fascinating watching him work using Chinese numerals and translate them into arabic ones! In order to communicate, we had to write equations on the chalk board and give hand waves, grunt "Huh?" when we got lost, and he would in turn go step by step on the chalk board with what he'd do grunting "Uhuh?"; Paul Dirac was, as I understand it, exactly like this during a lecture. Except when asked a question to clarify an equation, Dirac would simply shake his head.)

I also loved the forward; I love hearing about people's stories about how they decided to come into their respective fields. And Dr. Christopher Isham is a researcher I have the utmost regard for, reading his story - even if it was 3 paragraphs long (out of 2 pages) - was a pleasure.

Dr. Isham appears to have tremendous faith in Thiemann though. Isham writes in the forward:
My graduate students not infrequently ask me what I think of the current status of canonical quantum gravity and, in particular, what I think the chances are of ever making proper mathematical sense of the constraints that define the theory. For some years now I have replied to the effect that, if anybody can do it, it will be Thomas Thiemann and, if he cannot do it, then probably nobody will. Anyone who reads right through this major new work will understand why. I place so much trust in the author's ability to crack this central problem in quantum gravity.
(Forward, last paragraph on page xviii)

--emphasis added.

No pressure Dr. Thiemann, but the entire fate of canonical quantum gravity lies on your shoulders! :biggrin:
 
  • #14
Angryphysicist said:
That perhaps saddens me most seeing a math textbook being little more than a grocery list of definitions and theorems. It's so...boring! I don't know about others, but after reading a topology textbook for the first time, my initial response was "So...what? How is this 'open ball' thing useful in anyway? It seems like this author just needed a few extra bucks and decided to write a textbook to get by." (A very smart maneuver for math professors :wink: )

Too true! Every math textbook I've used for classes were just painful to read. To be honest, I think I learned advanced calculus and linear/abstract algebra from this forum and wikipedia instead of from textbooks. Of course, this doesn't make me too confident in my math background at all.

I may have to look into this book, are there any excerpts online?
 
  • #15
staf9 said:
I may have to look into this book, are there any excerpts online?
I don't think so, but there was a rough draft on arxiv.org if memory serves. (I just looked it up, and it's An Introduction to Modern Canonical Quantum General Relativity, similar title but I think it's more of a scaffolding for the topics to cover in the book rather than a rough draft.)

The closest thing to an excerpt is from Amazon.com.

Just what I could find...
 
  • #16
Angryphysicist said:
I don't think so, but there was a rough draft on arxiv.org if memory serves. (I just looked it up, and it's An Introduction to Modern Canonical Quantum General Relativity, similar title but I think it's more of a scaffolding for the topics to cover in the book rather than a rough draft.)

The closest thing to an excerpt is from Amazon.com.

Just what I could find...

Skimmed over it and it looks pretty interesting, I may very well end up buying this book.

Thanks very much for all your help Angry :smile:
 
  • #17
Now if Thiemann would only pay me commission I'd be set :biggrin:
 
  • #19
Wow! 65 dollar? Here in europe it costs at least 120 euro (=176 dollar). I have immediately ordered it from amazon. Shipping to europe only costs about 3 dollars. Ok, it will take about a month for it to arrive, but a 70 euro discount is worth waiting for.
 

1. Is Thomas Thiemann's book worth the price?

This is a subjective question and it ultimately depends on the individual's personal value and interest in the subject matter. However, many readers have found Thiemann's book to be a valuable resource for understanding complex scientific concepts.

2. What topics are covered in Thomas Thiemann's book?

The book covers a wide range of topics in theoretical physics, including quantum gravity, loop quantum gravity, and quantum cosmology. It also delves into mathematical concepts such as geometric quantization and spin networks.

3. Is the book suitable for non-experts?

The book is written for a general audience and does not require a deep understanding of theoretical physics. However, some basic knowledge of the subject matter may be helpful in fully comprehending the material.

4. Are there any criticisms of Thomas Thiemann's book?

Some readers have found the book to be dense and difficult to follow at times. Additionally, some have criticized Thiemann's theories for being too abstract and lacking experimental evidence.

5. Are there any additional resources recommended for further understanding the concepts in the book?

Yes, Thiemann provides a list of recommended readings at the end of each chapter for readers who want to delve deeper into the concepts discussed in the book. Additionally, there are many online resources and academic papers available for those interested in learning more about quantum gravity and related topics.

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