If you believe that after reading Landau - Mechanics then it might have some validity IMHO. But I do not know of any mathematician/physicist to which that applies.
If one posts here please explain, with references from that book, why - eg why its proof of the existence of mass, and that its positive, does not strike you as beautiful. When I read it and other parts of that book, at times too numerous to mention it was like a thunderbolt of lightning struck me. From a review on Amazon:
If physicists could weep, they would weep over this book. The book is devastatingly brief whilst deriving, in its few pages, all the great results of classical mechanics. Results that in other books take take up many more pages. I first came across Landau's mechanics many years ago as a brash undergrad. My prof at the time had given me this book but warned me that it's the kind of book that ages like wine. I've read this book several times since and I have found that indeed, each time is more rewarding than the last.The reason for the brevity is that, as pointed out by previous reviewers, Landau derives mechanics from symmetry. Historically, it was long after the main bulk of mechanics was developed that Emmy Noether proved that symmetries underly every important quantity in physics. So instead of starting from concrete mechanical case-studies and generalising to the formal machinery of the Hamilton equations, Landau starts out from the most generic symmetry and dervies the mechanics. The 2nd laws of mechanics, for example, is derived as a consequence of the uniqueness of trajectories in the Lagragian. For some, this may seem too "mathematical" but in reality, it is a sign of sophistication in physics if one can identify the underlying symmetries in a mechanical system. Thus this book represents the height of theoretical sophistication in that symmetries are used to derive so many physical results.
IMHO that says it all. Symmetry lies at the very foundations of physics - along with QM, which off course is what the symmetries are often applied to.
Thanks
Bill