Funny, chatty, physical. QFT education transformed!
"Tony Zee overcomes this particular problem quite successfully. He keeps algebra to a bare minimum, and tries to find the shortest route to the physics ideas. He chooses examples that illustrate concepts in the fastest possible way."
"The text is never boring to read, and is at times very, very funny. Puns and jokes abound, as do anecdotes involving the inventors of QFT. .... The net result is a book which is much easier, and more fun, to read than any of the other common QFT books out there. Tony Zee's skills as a popular physics writer have been used to excellent effect in writing this textbook."
A reader's review on Amazon.com rather than a review by a famous professor already expert on quantum field theory and hence probably more useful to the student learning quantum field theory.
This Quantum Field Theory text stands apart from others in
so many ways that it's difficult to list them all :-). A very unique QFT introductory
text.
One problem with learning QFT is that it is so easy to get lost in the mathematical
details that the core physics concepts often get obscured.
In my opinion, Tony Zee overcomes this particular problem quite successfully.
He keeps algebra to a bare minimum, and tries to find the shortest route to
the physics ideas. He chooses examples that illustrate concepts in the fastest
possible way.
The chapters are short. So refreshing! Each chapter has one or two core ideas.
You can go through one in ten minutes (glossing over the math), and then you
go back and do the math.
Part I (first eighty or so pages) is called "Motivation and Foundation"
and is a rapid introduction to QFT. It is also a summary and sweeping overview
--- introducing path integrals and Feynman diagrams and making a very intuitive
transition from Quantum mechanics to Field theory.
The next three parts cover spin-1/2 particles (Dirac spinors), renormalization,
and symmetry (breaking), standard fare for QFT texts. A sampling of condensed-matter
applications is given in Parts V & VI, and then current high-energy topics
are treated in parts VII & VIII.
The applications make this text stand out. There is a selection of advanced
current topics like the quantum hall physics, surface growth, string theory,
D-branes and quantum gravity, not usually found in introductory field theory
texts. Of course none of these topics can be done justice in a book at this
level, but getting a taste of advanced issues is a great treat.
The exposition is breezy and chatty, as the author admits was his intention.
The text is never boring to read, and is at times very, very funny. Puns and
jokes abound, as do anecdotes involving the inventors of QFT.
Renormalization is discussed through a lively dialog between student Confusio,
a female Smart Experimentalist (SE), and a senior (Egghead) theorist. Ode
to Galileo! Section headings alternate between serious and hilarious --- one
section is called "Wisdom of the son-in-law". The path integral
formulation of quantum mechanics comes out of a conversation between a teacher
and a "wise-guy" student, who happens to be Feynman.
And so on and so forth.
The net result is a book which is much easier, and more fun, to read than
any of the other common QFT books out there. Tony Zee's skills as a popular
physics writer have been used to excellent effect in writing this textbook.
One more distinctive feature is that there is equal emphasis on condensed-matter
and high-energy applications. Most QFT texts today, unfortunately, are so
biased toward particle-physics that they tend to put off condensed-matter
students. A. Zee has broken the mold!
Is the treatment "over"-simplified? Maybe simplified, but not dumbed-down.
The high concept-to-pain ratio certainly seems worth the simplification.
Is this text only good as a supplement? Well, it is after all a "Nutshell",
so maybe other texts are better for details. But as an introduction to QFT
concepts, few other books match this.
Wholeheartedly recommended.
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