Are old theoretical texts worth saving?

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The discussion centers around the dilemma of what to do with a collection of old engineering, physics, and math books inherited from a deceased father who was an expert in these fields. The original poster expresses a desire to avoid recycling the books and seeks suggestions for responsible disposal or donation. Participants recommend donating the books to local libraries or used bookstores, particularly those specializing in technical texts. They emphasize that many old books can hold significant value, both academically and historically, regardless of their publication date. Some contributors express a personal interest in collecting older texts, noting their potential for clarity and depth compared to modern textbooks. Overall, the consensus is to find a way to preserve these books for future use rather than discarding them.
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I am probably in the same boat as a bunch of people. My father passed away and had a ton of texts. He was a PhD/expert in Heat Transfer, Fluid dynamics and Nuclear Engineering.

There are some good theoretical engineering,physics,math books from the 30's 40's and 50's, some of which might still be useful to someone. He made a purge of them in the past 15 years getting rid of many of the obsolete ones. I basically don't want to dump the whole lot into the recycling.

Can anyone think of a place to dump these that someone might be able to pick out the gems, or is it not worth my effort.

Thanks.
 
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maybe give them to a library or used book store
 
You could also contact your local university's physics department - some of the grad students there might take them off your hands.
 
carlz0 said:
Can anyone think of a place to dump these...

Many old books can be priceless, but it is difficult for us to know from a general description. Your best bet would be to either find a library that wants them, or talk to a 2nd-hand bookstore that specializes in technical books.

I guarantee that someone will be interested in them, even if they aren't worth a lot of money in bulk. Whatever you do, don't just dump them in the recycling.
 
the value of a book is proportional to the quality of the author, and has nothing at all to do with the date of publication.
 
I'm actually quite enthusiastic about collecting older texts. If I inherited such a collection, I would certainly keep as much of it as possible.

I find that some older texts are all around better and are easier to learn from (I prefer a style with less colour, graphics, blabber--straight to the point). Of course some books go out of date, but math and 'general' physics, remain basically unchanged.
 
here is a quote from Arnol'd:

"The "obsolete" course by Hermite of one hundred years ago (probably, now thrown away from student libraries of French universities) was much more modern than those most boring calculus textbooks with which students are nowadays tormented."and here is the full essay:

http://pauli.uni-muenster.de/~munsteg/arnold.html
 
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If you are in MA, USA ... I will pick them up :smile:
 
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If you're near Toronto, I'll pick them up:)
 
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