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Named a Top Five Book of 2012 by Physics Today, USA."Anderson has
put together an entertaining and instructive collection of highly
readable reviews, columns, talks, and unpublished essays on science
and the scientists he has known. He is rarely inappropriately
provocative, and he is a pleasure to read."Physics TodayPhilip
Anderson was educated at University High School in Urbana,
Illinois, at Harvard (BS 1943, PhD 1949), and further educated at
Bell Laboratories, where his career (1949-1984) coincided with the
greatest period of that remarkable institution. Starting in 1967,
he shared his time with Cambridge University (until 1975) and then
with Princeton, where he continued full time as Joseph Henry
Professor until 1997. As an emeritus he remains active in research,
and at press time he was involved in several scientific
controversies about high profile subjects, in which his point of
view, though unpopular at the moment, is likely to prevail
eventually. His colleagues have made him one of the two physicists
most often cited in the scientific literature, for several
decades.His work is characterized by mathematical simplicity
combined with conceptual depth, and by profound respect for
experimental findings. He has explored areas outside his main
discipline, the quantum theory of condensed matter (for which he
won the 1977 Nobel Prize), on several occasions: his paper on what
is now called the "Anderson-Higgs mechanism" was a main source for
Peter Higgs' elucidation of the boson; a crucial insight led to
work on the dynamics of neutron stars (pulsars); and his concept of
the spin glass led far afield, to developments in practical
computer algorithms and neural nets, and eventually to his
involvement in the early years of the Santa Fe Institute and his
co-leadership with Kenneth Arrow of two influential workshops on
economics at that institution. His writing career started with a
much-quoted article in Science titled "More is Different" in 1971;
he was an occasional columnist for Physics Today in the 1980s and
1990s. He was more recently a reviewer of science and
science-related books for the Times (London) Higher Education
Supplement as well as an occasional contributor to Science, Nature,
and other journals.
These lecture notes constitute a course on a number of central
concepts of solid state physics - classification of solids, band
theory, the developments in one-electron band theory in the
presence of perturbation, effective Hamiltonian theory, elementary
excitations and the various types of collective elementary
excitation (excitons, spin waves and phonons), the Fermi liquid,
ferromagnetic spin waves, antiferromagnetic spin waves and the
theory of broken symmetry.The book can be used in conjunction with
a survey course in solid state physics, or as the basis of a first
graduate-level course. It can be read by anyone who has had basic
grounding in quantum mechanics.
This book proceeds from a meeting at the Santa Fe Institute where
economists and physical and biological scientists came together to
discuss a conceptual framework incorporating a more appropriate
mathematics with a greatly strengthened capacity to deal
simultaneously with multiple variables, nonlinearity, incomplete
information and dynamical processes.
Basic Notions of Condensed Matter Physics is a clear introduction
to some of the most significant concepts in the physics of
condensed matter. The general principles of many-body physics and
perturbation theory are emphasised, providing supportive
mathematical structure. This is an expansion and restatement of the
second half of Nobel Laureate Philip Anderson's classic Concepts in
Solids.
"Basic Notions of Condensed Matter Physics" is a clear introduction
to some of the most significant concepts in the physics of
condensed matter. The general principles of many-body physics and
perturbation theory are emphasised, providing supportive
mathematical structure. This is an expansion and restatement of the
second half of Nobel Laureate Philip Anderson's classic "Concepts
in Solids."
Had a workshop at the Santa Fe Institute. The purpose of the
workshop was to explore the potential usefulness of a broadly
transdisciplinary research program on the dynamics of the global
economic system, by bringing together a group of natural scientists
who have developed techniques for studying nonlinear dynamical
systems and adaptive paths in evolutionary systems.
These lecture notes constitute a course on a number of central
concepts of solid state physics - classification of solids, band
theory, the developments in one-electron band theory in the
presence of perturbation, effective Hamiltonian theory, elementary
excitations and the various types of collective elementary
excitation (excitons, spin waves and phonons), the Fermi liquid,
ferromagnetic spin waves, antiferromagnetic spin waves and the
theory of broken symmetry.The book can be used in conjunction with
a survey course in solid state physics, or as the basis of a first
graduate-level course. It can be read by anyone who has had basic
grounding in quantum mechanics.
Named a Top Five Book of 2012 by Physics Today, USA."Anderson has
put together an entertaining and instructive collection of highly
readable reviews, columns, talks, and unpublished essays on science
and the scientists he has known. He is rarely inappropriately
provocative, and he is a pleasure to read."Physics TodayPhilip
Anderson was educated at University High School in Urbana,
Illinois, at Harvard (BS 1943, PhD 1949), and further educated at
Bell Laboratories, where his career (1949-1984) coincided with the
greatest period of that remarkable institution. Starting in 1967,
he shared his time with Cambridge University (until 1975) and then
with Princeton, where he continued full time as Joseph Henry
Professor until 1997. As an emeritus he remains active in research,
and at press time he was involved in several scientific
controversies about high profile subjects, in which his point of
view, though unpopular at the moment, is likely to prevail
eventually. His colleagues have made him one of the two physicists
most often cited in the scientific literature, for several
decades.His work is characterized by mathematical simplicity
combined with conceptual depth, and by profound respect for
experimental findings. He has explored areas outside his main
discipline, the quantum theory of condensed matter (for which he
won the 1977 Nobel Prize), on several occasions: his paper on what
is now called the "Anderson-Higgs mechanism" was a main source for
Peter Higgs' elucidation of the boson; a crucial insight led to
work on the dynamics of neutron stars (pulsars); and his concept of
the spin glass led far afield, to developments in practical
computer algorithms and neural nets, and eventually to his
involvement in the early years of the Santa Fe Institute and his
co-leadership with Kenneth Arrow of two influential workshops on
economics at that institution. His writing career started with a
much-quoted article in Science titled "More is Different" in 1971;
he was an occasional columnist for Physics Today in the 1980s and
1990s. He was more recently a reviewer of science and
science-related books for the Times (London) Higher Education
Supplement as well as an occasional contributor to Science, Nature,
and other journals.
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