Twenty years ago, I received my undergraduate and graduate education in Mexico and in Britain. I was lucky enough to have lecturers who based their courses on what are still considered the two best encyclopedic physics books ever written: The Feynman Lectures on Physics and the Landau and Lifshitz Course of Theoretical Physics. Later on, I taught physics using mainly Feynman in undergraduate courses and Landau and Lifshitz in graduate ones. I agree with Matt Sands that Feynman’s books require a lot of complementary effort from the lecturer in setting examples and problems, but my experience, first as a student and later as a lecturer, has led me to believe that the results of studying Feynman are well worth the effort.
© 2005 American Institute of Physics.
2005
American Institute of Physics