Looking for a Better Mechanics Textbook? Any Suggestions?

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In a discussion about finding a suitable mechanics textbook for a second-year course, participants express dissatisfaction with David Morin's "Introduction to Classical Mechanics" due to its lack of conceptual explanations and focus on problem-solving. Recommendations for alternative textbooks include Taylor, which is praised for its clear explanations but noted for easier problems, and Kleppner/Kolenkow, highlighted for its thorough explanations and challenging problems. Greiner is also mentioned as a potential resource. The consensus suggests using a combination of these texts to gain a solid understanding of key topics such as statics, dynamics, rotational dynamics, work and energy, momentum, and special relativity while supplementing with Morin for more difficult problems.
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I'm currently in a mechanics course (second year) that uses the David Morin book (Introduction to Classical Mechanics) which I find to be very unhelpful. It's mostly just problems with very little explanation of the concepts. I'm looking for a textbook to replace Morin's which covers the same topics:

Statics
Dynamics (especially Atwood's machines)
Rotational Dynamics
Work and Energy
Momentum
Special Relativity

Does anyone have any good suggestions?
 
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The standard books for a second year mechanics course, from what I've seen at most university catalogs, are Taylor and\or Marion. Taylor explains things very well but I would definitely not stop using Morin as a supplement. Morin's harder problems can be extremely rewarding unlike the majority of problems in Taylor which are breezy. You can learn the concepts from Taylor but do the problems in Morin. If you want a mechanics book that explains things extremely well and has difficult problems but doesn't cover certain things from a second year such as lagrangian or hamiltonian mechanics (it covers everything you listed however) then check out Kleppner. Kleppner is such a good book I can't stress it enough.
 
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The book is fascinating. If your education includes a typical math degree curriculum, with Lebesgue integration, functional analysis, etc, it teaches QFT with only a passing acquaintance of ordinary QM you would get at HS. However, I would read Lenny Susskind's book on QM first. Purchased a copy straight away, but it will not arrive until the end of December; however, Scribd has a PDF I am now studying. The first part introduces distribution theory (and other related concepts), which...
I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...

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