R136a1 said:
First, [Ballentine] tries to be mathematically rigorous
No, he doesn't. He tries to give more background on certain math topics than many other QM books when dealing with unbounded operators, but only to a level that facilitates practical QM calculations. He doesn't pretend to be writing a "QM for Mathematicians" book.
Sure, totally rigorous books on QM are fine and have a valid place in the world. That doesn't make Ballentine "horrible", any more than a non-smoking restaurant is "horrible" because you're not allowed to smoke there.
and totally botches the job so it confuses people even more.
I was not confused. Were you?
It mentions there's a difference between self-adjoint and hermitian, but then later totally ignores the difference. It spends a paragraph on rigged hilbert spaces but they sadly don't show up later where they can be actually useful.
Precisely where in Ballentine do you think explicit mention of RHS could "actually be useful"?
His approach of the spectral theorem suffers the same defects. Why confuse readers with mathematical rigor if he isn't going to be rigorous in the sequel anyway??
Because his main purpose is to motivate a Dirac-style spectral decomposition for unbounded operators and continuous spectra. Such things handled either by a version of the spectral theorem for unbounded operators in Hilbert space, or by the Gel'fand-Maurin spectral theorem in rigged Hilbert space, and Ballentine describes both, albeit briefly. He's not trying to write a book on functional analysis.
He also spends way too much time on the ensemble interpretation, which is totally useless and outdated.
Huh? Focussing on the minimal statistical interpretation, and deprecating Copenhagen,
is a modern approach. It's as close as you can get to "shut up and calculate" and therefore is "totally useful" in the practical sense.
Just teach how to calculate stuff and leave the interpretations to philosophy books.
"How to calculate stuff"
is Ballentine's main emphasis. Sure, he mentions some interpretation-related stuff, but that's intended to help dispel long-standing myths that tend to hang around and confuse students in the modern era.
Maybe you [ilikescience94] need to tell us first what mathematics you know?
I agree with that, and sense that Ballentine may be above ilikescience94's current math background. But in that case, so are lots of other books.