Have you been continuing your self-study schemes into realms beyond math stuff? If so I’m interested in both the motivation and how it’s going! I remember having little interest in other non-physics science growing up, but that was also before I got good at learning things and my enjoyment was based on how well it was presented.
Yeah, I’ve read a lot of books since my reviews fell off last year, most of them still math. I wasn’t able to type reliably until early this summer, so my reviews kinda got derailed. I’ve read Visual Group Theory, Understanding Machine Learning, Computational Complexity: A Conceptual Perspective, Introduction to the Theory of Computation, An Illustrated Theory of Numbers, most of Tadellis’ Game Theory, the beginning of Multiagent Systems, parts of several graph theory textbooks, and I’m going through Munkres’ Topology right now. I’ve gotten through the first fifth of the first Feynman lectures, which has given me an unbelievable amount of mileage for generally reasoning about physics.
I want to go back to my reviews, but I just have a lot of other stuff going on right now. Also, I run into fewer basic confusions than when I was just starting at math, so I generally have less to talk about. I guess I could instead try and re-present the coolest concepts from the book.
My “plan” is to keep learning math until the low graduate level (I still need to at least do complex analysis, topology, field / ring theory, ODEs/PDEs, and something to shore up my atrocious trig skills, and probably more)[1], and then branch off into physics + a “softer” science (anything from microecon to psychology). CS (“done”) → math → physics → chem → bio is the major track for the physical sciences I have in mind, but that might change. I dunno, there’s just a lot of stuff I still want to learn. :)
Yay learning all the things! Your reviews are fun, also completely understandable putting energy elsewhere. Your energy for more learning is very useful for periodically bouncing myself into more learning.
Have you been continuing your self-study schemes into realms beyond math stuff? If so I’m interested in both the motivation and how it’s going! I remember having little interest in other non-physics science growing up, but that was also before I got good at learning things and my enjoyment was based on how well it was presented.
Yeah, I’ve read a lot of books since my reviews fell off last year, most of them still math. I wasn’t able to type reliably until early this summer, so my reviews kinda got derailed. I’ve read Visual Group Theory, Understanding Machine Learning, Computational Complexity: A Conceptual Perspective, Introduction to the Theory of Computation, An Illustrated Theory of Numbers, most of Tadellis’ Game Theory, the beginning of Multiagent Systems, parts of several graph theory textbooks, and I’m going through Munkres’ Topology right now. I’ve gotten through the first fifth of the first Feynman lectures, which has given me an unbelievable amount of mileage for generally reasoning about physics.
I want to go back to my reviews, but I just have a lot of other stuff going on right now. Also, I run into fewer basic confusions than when I was just starting at math, so I generally have less to talk about. I guess I could instead try and re-present the coolest concepts from the book.
My “plan” is to keep learning math until the low graduate level (I still need to at least do complex analysis, topology, field / ring theory, ODEs/PDEs, and something to shore up my atrocious trig skills, and probably more)[1], and then branch off into physics + a “softer” science (anything from microecon to psychology). CS (“done”) → math → physics → chem → bio is the major track for the physical sciences I have in mind, but that might change. I dunno, there’s just a lot of stuff I still want to learn. :)
I also still want to learn Bayes nets, category theory, get a much deeper understanding of probability theory, provability logic, and decision theory.
Yay learning all the things! Your reviews are fun, also completely understandable putting energy elsewhere. Your energy for more learning is very useful for periodically bouncing myself into more learning.