Hi
thx for that however I have to ask some questions about it.
The Lagrangian describes how a system acts at a given action but
it doesn't describe which input you have to the action.
I mean in classical mechanics you can say well I have a ball with
mass m and radius r and use the Lagrangian to calculate how it reacts
at a force etc..
Or short it describes only the interactions.
But in the standard model there are only certain combinations of
values possible so I can have an electron of mass 0.511 MeV and charge -1
or a quark but I can't say well I want a particle with mass 0.2MeV.
So to have a complete description of the standard model shouldn't there
be a description of the fundamental particles?
(aside: the expression given in the link has no Higgs boson. Strictly speaking, this is a non-viable theory because it is non-renormalizable (which is ok if one thinks of the SM as an effective field theory). One should really provide the full Standard Model, including the Higgs terms.)