The Physics Travel Guide is like Wikipedia, but specifically for learning all topics within physics. Covers three levels: intuitive, concrete, and abstract.
It’s an expository physics wiki, but also much more than that:
- Every page emphasizes why the given topic is interesting.
- We publish for any given topic different explanations with increasing levels of sophistication.
- To illustrate the concepts, we collect concrete examples.
- We collect reading recommendations and answers to frequently asked questions.
- There are roadmaps, that give concrete advice on how to learn a given topic.
Great Explanations in the Spotlight
There already exist great explanations for almost any topic. However, currently, they are often incredibly hard to find and hidden in old textbooks or in papers buried somewhere on the arXiv. Our goal is that great explanations get the attention they deserve.
In contrast to, for example, Wikipedia we do not simply refer the readers to the most rigorous textbook and the original paper, i.e. the “standard references”. Instead, we want to collect those resources that are the most helpful for students. We want to help learners to discover the best resources for each stage during their journey.
Who is it for?
The Physics Travel Guide exists to lower the entry barrier to technical topics for laymen, students and researchers alike. Specifically, it’s a tool for:
- Students who prefer to learn at their own pace and want to know more than is taught in the lectures.
- Lecturers and teachers who search for inspiration of how to explain things better.
- Researchers who want to learn new topics more quickly.
- Interested laypersons who search for explanations that everyone can understand.
Made for Self-Directed Learning
The Physics Travel Guide tries to fill a gap because textbooks and lectures usually don’t acknowledge that there is a difference between pedagogy and andragogy. Textbooks and lectures explain things linearly and try to be pedagogical. “Pedagogy” is a synthesis of the two Greek words “paidos” (child) and “ágō” (to lead) and literally means “to lead a child”. In contrast, “andragogy” means literally “to lead a man” and is the study of methods and principles to teach adults. It’s clear that you can’t teach children and adults in the same way.
This Physics Travel Guide has the needs of adults in mind, is non-linear and ideally suited for self-directed learning.