Which text books would you recommend?

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Hunus
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For any mathematician or physicist, what textbooks do you consider a must read?

Also, what books do you remember reading that gave you great insight into a topic which you previously did not have?
 
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hi, and welcome to the forum. this is theoretically a good question, but from a practical standpoint its too general. please check the thread on recommended books, and then make a more precise question. you will get better answers. i know you don't mean it this way, but this question cannot be answered unless the answerer does more work on it than you yourself have done in asking it. that isn't workable. also read my who wants to be a math... thread for a huge list of recommended books.

best wishes
 
Thanks for the reply Mathwonk.

I know that this thread is very general, but I hope for replies with books on many different topics.

Also, I have read your How to be a Mathematician thread several times over.

I hoped for people to post just a few of the books that they really thought were great books regardless of the specific topic. I understand this is a very general question, but I intended for it to be, just to see what people had to say.
 
It's hard to narrow it down but my three favorite textbooks (at this moment) are Taylor Classical Mechanics, Sakurai Quantum Mechanics and Ross Differential equations (this is a great LD diff eq book).

I found all of those insightful and good reads.
 
Hunus said:
For any mathematician or physicist, what textbooks do you consider a must read?

At advanced level there can be many but at more basic level I would recommend landau-lifgarbagez volumes 1 and 2, and whittaker-watson modern analysis.