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8:01 PM
What?
 
@0celo7 Oh god
So many tabs
 
 
8:23 PM
Say what you want about engineers but they respond to emails very quickly!
 
@Riker That grin is disturbing. What does he know we don't?
 
prolly many things
with an infinity of hims he knows everything
or at least the union of all the sets of his knowledge is infinite
 
@ACuriousMind Why does this black magic proof work? V([0,1])=1 so R is uncountable.
Nowhere in the construction of Lebesgue measure does one use the uncountability of R
 
@0celo7 What's V?
 
Lebesgue measure
 
8:34 PM
I'm back
@Riker Go away you evil cat
 
@BernardoMeurer Be Nice.
 
I mean...all you have to do is show an interval doesn't have measure zero.
 
@ACuriousMind That's perfectly nice
 
That seems so strange
 
@0celo7 I'm not sure I understand how that proof is supposed to work at all
 
8:35 PM
Where does one use any properties of R in that proof
@ACuriousMind a countable set has measure zero
An interval doesn't. So it's uncountable.
 
Ah, yes. So the "magic" is in the proof of "a countable set has measure zero". What's the question?
 
You and your proprietary malware
 
@ACuriousMind I need to think more. Someone in the construction of Lebesgue measure there's a sup or something.
I don't remember that being the case.
 
@ACuriousMind That did not hurt me
 
I never wanted to hurt you <3
 
8:39 PM
Your proprietary actions cannot hurt my free software
Because there is no system but GNU
Sigh, this is getting exhausting, I really need a bot to spread the word
 
People with glasses make me mad
 
@0celo7 Well, in the 1d case you're constructing the Lebesgue measure by declaring intervals $[a,b]$ to have measure $b-a$ basically. A countable set clearly has inner measure 0 then since you can't fit any non-trivial intervals inside it.
(I may not have used "inner measure" in its formal sense here, I hope you know what I'm trying to say)
 
@ACuriousMind Ok I don't need you to explain measure theory
I'm thinking out loud here.
The measure theory proof is just so different from the Cantor proof
And I don't see where the measure theory proof uses completeness of R. I'm missing something
 
@0celo7 I probably couldn't, anyway :P
 
@ACuriousMind you did use inner measure correctly btw
inner Lebesgue measure is generated by putting $(a,b)$ inside of things
@ACuriousMind Recall that one can define "measure zero" without measure theory. I want to see if one can prove that [0,1] does not have measure zero without mentioning measure theory.
@ACuriousMind Ah. One needs compactness. It's not true that $[0,1]\cap \Bbb Q$ is compact.
Or...is it??
 
8:47 PM
It's not compact (it's a bounded subset of $\mathbb{R}$ but it's not closed)
 
That was a joke
Although maybe not, I meant in the subspace topology
 
@0celo7 Can't you use what you used on the chub'n proof?
 
@BernardoMeurer Yeah, using that definition, I want to show that $[0,1]$ does not have measure zero. I think that's quite difficult actually.
 
@0celo7 Hm. Just prove it's not countable?
Is that also very hard?
 
There are uncountable sets with measure zero.
And the whole point is to use the concept of measure zero to prove it's uncountable.
 
8:51 PM
O.o
Hm
 
@BernardoMeurer Take the Cantor set
It's a bit tricky, but you can show it's uncountable
That it has measure zero is easy to prove
 
ay
one question
 
@BernardoMeurer What I have to show is that if $I$ is a closed interval, and $I_1,I_2,\dotsc$ form a cover, then $\sum_{j\ge 1}|I_j|\ge |I|$. That doesn't seem crazy.
I think that's trivial
 
so we know that in the case of curved mirrorsreal images are always inverted and virtual are erect
but is that the case in a plane mirror too?
 
But why shouldn't that hold for subsets of $\Bbb Q$ is the 1,000,000 Rupee question
 
8:56 PM
and can a real image even form on a plan mirror?
 
@ACuriousMind Any ideas?
 
@0celo7 any idea?
 
let me go to the bathroom first pls
 
..
o/
have a satisfying excretion!!
 
@MartianCactus I don't know why I said that
but I have to go to the doctor
 
9:07 PM
@BernardoMeurer ffs what did I do to you
 
so you have to go to the doctor to use the bathroom?
interesting..
 
@JohnRennie are you here
 
@Riker You know what you did
 
Um. Let's not comment on that and change the topic, perhaps? :)
 
it could be nothing, or it could be cancer...probably sums up just about any medical thing, actually
so, how about those covariant derivatives?
 
9:15 PM
@ACuriousMind do you want me to die?
 
@0celo7 No, I want you to go to a doctor and the room to perhaps not talk about your (literal) shit :P
 
rob
@0celo7 If you're afraid of dying, go the ER. If you're whinging about your unmentionables for amusement value, stop. We can't help you here. As @ACuriousMind says, let's change the subject.
 
so we know that in the case of curved mirrorsreal images are always inverted and virtual are erect
but is that the case in a plane mirror too?
and can a real image even form on a plan mirror?
 
Amusement?
Jesus christ
 
a plane mirror cannot form a real image
except at infinity I guess
 
9:17 PM
Urgh, optics. Only a slight improvement in topic :)
 
> I must be missing some threads here. I thought we were talking about NE class scheduling.
 
rob
@BenNiehoff A plane mirror can form a real image of a virtual object :-)
 
He doesn't seem to be concerned
 
@rob that sounds like some Alice & Wonderland right there
 
and is a virtual image in plane mirror always erect..?
 
9:19 PM
a plane mirror cannot form real images, unless they are of the white rabbit
 
oh xd
 
we usually say "right-side-up"
 
oh..
lol thats a good whatever you call it to remember stuff
like Soh Cah Toa
 
no, I mean that's the phrase used in normal English
 
9:20 PM
nobody says "erect"
unless they're talking about penises
 
lol that gives the wrong idea
xd
 
@ACuriousMind For brevity, let $A_q$ denote $A\cap\Bbb Q$, where $A\subset\Bbb R$. We say that $A\subset \Bbb Q$ has $\Bbb Q$-measure zero if for $\epsilon>0$ in $\Bbb Q$, there is an open covering of $A$ by rational intervals $I_j$ such that $\sum_{j\ge 1}|I_j|<\epsilon$. Does this seem reasonable?
 
which could form virtual images in a mirror, I suppose
 
in India we sure do..
 
@BenNiehoff huh? That's how my textbook calls it
 
9:21 PM
so can virtual images never point downwards in plane mirrors too?
 
@0celo7 are you sure you didn't buy one of those Indian editions? ;)
 
@BenNiehoff It was like $400, so no.
And my lecture notes say that too
 
another word is "upright"
 
yeah so
do virtual images do that?
 
@ACuriousMind Claim: Every set has $\Bbb Q$-measure zero. Proof: Follows from the usual proof in $\Bbb R$.
 
9:22 PM
can't you draw a ray diagram?
 
like are they always upright in plane mirrors too?
i can and im gonna try in a sec
but just to be sure :D
 
I think plane mirror images are always erect...except maybe for the white rabbit again
 
@ACuriousMind I claim that I should be able to show that $(0,1)_q$ does not have $\Bbb Q$-measure zero.
 
white rabbit?
 
a reference to Through the Looking Glass
 
9:23 PM
Thus contradicting all of measure theory and netting me a Fields medal.
 
rob
43 messages moved to Trash
 
Let $\{I_j\}$ be a covering of $(0,1)_q$ by rational intervals.
@rob what was that for?
 
invited to Trash...now I can finally escape the Death Star!
3
 
rob
@0celo7 Just tidying up.
 
Lift to $\Bbb R$; we obtain a covering of $(0,1)$ by intervals. Using standard techniques, we can show that the remaining sets have at least volume $1$. But this is unchanged in $\Bbb Q$, so we have $\sum_{i\ge 1}|I_i|\ge 1$.
 
9:25 PM
"That time when you poop so much in night that it empties your stomach really bad and ur all tired so you lie in bed and the empty stomach seems like the best thing in the world and combined with the AC and the fact that you washed yourself with water and are feeling that good freezing chill thing makes it the best of the bestest moments of exsitence.." - Cactus
 
So $(0,1)_q$ does not have $\Bbb Q$-measure zero.
This is so strange
 
rob
@MartianCactus Trying it is nice. Proving it mathematically is also nice, in case your plane mirror isn't in an infinitely-large room. Try it this way:
Figure out, for a concave curved mirror, what the condition is for the image to be inverted vs. upright. That you can test, using the curved mirror you probably have in your house.
 
What curved mirror?
 
rob
Then flatten your curved mirror by making the radius of curvature arbitrarily large, and see whether it's still possible to produce the inverted image.
For a bonus you can also show that a convex mirror always makes upright virtual images of real objects, and flatten that one, too.
 
@0celo7 many people have a shaving or makeup mirror which is concave
 
9:32 PM
I don't have a curved mirror, but I've got two flat ones
 
^
 
idk yet how to do tiff with mirrors in real life, I only know how to fraw ray diagrams and stuff as we haven't yet been taken to the lab(next grade which will be starting in a month will do that)
im personally not good in optics yet D:
 
rob
@BenNiehoff When I eat cereal for breakfast, I use a convex-concave dual-surface mirror, but the optical quality is poor.
 
what
 
rob
@MartianCactus Do you have a shaving mirror or a makeup mirror?
 
9:33 PM
you eat cereal from a metal bowl?
 
rob
@0celo7 A tiny one that fits in my mouth, at the end of a long handle.
 
wtf?
 
rob
THERE IS NO SPOON
 
@0celo7 A spoon.
 
...who eats cereal with a spoon lol
 
9:35 PM
...how else would you eat cereal? With a fork?!
 
@ACuriousMind uh, hands?
 
I thought we were talking about cereal+milk.
 
yeah
make a cup with your hand
 
You plunge your hands into the milk?
What sort of savage are you?! :D
 
I don't want to have to wash the spoon
 
rob
9:36 PM
Perhaps we could continue helping @MartianCactus make images.
 
@ACuriousMind I saw the guy with the hood in a tree reading a book on my way home
near Perkins @rob
 
rob
@MartianCactus Do you have a shaving mirror or a makeup mirror?
 
my mom might have a makeup one
i dont shave yet
i only do the machine stuff
and idk why you would need a mirror for shaving either :P
tho i cant ask my mom for the makeup mirror
 
rob
@MartianCactus Borrow hers.
 
because its 3 am shes sleeping and she thinks that im sleeping too..
 
rob
9:39 PM
Up close you'll see your upright image, with all your pores, etc.
Set it on a counter and walk back across the room, and eventually you'll see the reflection invert.
 
but but
i dont have it yet xd
we will do this later
 
rob
@MartianCactus This is called "planning." :-)
 
alright
whats a counter?
 
flat surface you do things on
 
rob
@MartianCactus A work surface, like the one that holds up a kitchen sink or bathroom sink.
 
9:41 PM
@ACuriousMind Do you not care that I just proved $\Bbb Q$ is uncountable :(
 
rob
@MartianCactus Not your first language, no worries at all.
@0celo7 I never climbed the trees around Perkins much because I wasn't on that side of the hill. I used to spend a lot of time in the one by the Nielsen upper-level entrance, and in a few of the super-climbable ones on the north side of the hill, below Ayres.
 
ik :D
 
I'm never on that side of Ayres, I always find new things there
I've never seen anyone in the Nielsen tree
They cut down one of the trees in front of Hodges
apparently something is wrong with the sewer/utilities
the whole street is torn up
 
what if 2 different incident ray and reflected rays meet?
 
rob
9:44 PM
@0celo7 You used to have to jump to get to the lowest branch, but not far. But it could be that the limb I used has been pruned since the last time I was there.
 
rays of the same point but going in different directions
 
rob
@MartianCactus For reflections, some of the rays may cross at places other than the images.
That's part of the reason that some people teach lenses before mirrors: there's a "goes into" side and a "goes out of" side.
If you do the three principal rays (goes in parallel, goes out parallel, goes through optical center), then all three should meet in exactly one place.
Well two points: they all start from the object, and all (perhaps virtually) pass through the image.
 
10:01 PM
@BalarkaSen Are you around?
@bolbteppa you work too
up for some measure theory?
 
Measure theory is disgusting
 
what does that mean
there's an animosity for measure theory that I don't understand
@BenNiehoff My father "Could be something as simple as hemorrhoids or something as serious as colon cancer (highly unlikely at your young age)."
@bolbteppa look I promise it has nothing to do with measure theory
only as much measure theory as in GP's appendix on Sard's thm
 
The measure of a countable set of real numbers is zero
 
@bolbteppa Consider the following: does $[0,1]$ have measure zero?
 
the measure of $[0,1]$ is $1$ right? If $[0,1]$ were countable, then it should have measure zero, but it doesn't, therefore it's uncountable, right?
 
10:13 PM
@bolbteppa correct
 
It's a bit ridiculous, but that's measure theory for you
 
Exactly. But I think I can prove that $[0,1]\cap\Bbb Q$ doesn't have measure zero using the exact same proof that $[0,1]$ doesn't.
But that's absurd since it's countable.
 
Can't be true
What is your proof
 
@bolbteppa Let's run through it for $[0,1]$. Cover $[0,1]$ by open intervals $\{I_j\}_{j\ge 1}$. Since $[0,1]$ is compact, $I_1,\dotsc, I_N$ covers. Agreed?
For $I=(a,b)$, write $|I|=b-a$. We want to show that $\sum_{i=1}^N|I_j|\ge 1$.
This is pretty much clear, because the union of $I_j$'s contains some $(-\epsilon,1+\epsilon)$ since $[0,1]$ is also connected
So $\sum_{j\ge 1}|I_j|\ge 1$, so you can't make it $<\epsilon$.
Thus $[0,1]$ does not have measure zero.
 
How the hell could [0,1] have measure zero?
 
10:19 PM
So what I guess I don't understand is: why doesn't a cover $\{I_j\}$ of $[0,1]\cap\Bbb Q$ give a cover of $[0,1]$? Doesn't density give that?
@DanielSank It doesn't, but it's something one must prove.
Note that I'm not using the concept of measure here, just the concept of zero measure.
 
@0celo7 I forget how Lebesgue measure is defined, but I thought the fact that $[a,b]$ has measure $|b-a|$ was an axiom.
 
@DanielSank I just said I'm not using Lebesgue measure.
 
@0celo7 k
 
But then the question becomes: what goes wrong if I try to define Lebesgue measure on $\Bbb Q$-intervals?
 
The cover $\{I_j\}$ does cover $[0,1] \cap \mathbb{Q}$, but so what? The measure of the cover of $[0,1] \cap \mathbb{Q}$ is different to the measure of $[0,1] \cap \mathbb{Q}$.
 
10:23 PM
@bolbteppa Other way around; suppose $\{I_j\}$ covers $[0,1]\cap\Bbb Q$. Does it also cover $[0,1]$?
 
Ah I think I get it
 
You guys are hijacking the room with measure theory. This isn't even physics.
 
Or, does a finite subcover theorem hold for $[0,1]\cap\Bbb Q$. Definitely not by Heine-Borel, but I don't know why not.
 
(This is sarcasm)
 
@DanielSank I don't see anyone trying to hold a different conversation.
 
10:24 PM
Do you guys have to leave because I find this discussion annoying?
 
Finally! Handed the draft back to my collaborators
 
Nope.
 
@BenNiehoff Playing hot potato with it? ;)
 
@ACuriousMind of course!
 
Maybe I'm just stupid. There are lots of such covers.
I think this is a non-issue :P
$(-1,1/\pi)\cup (1/\pi,2)$ does the trick :P
 
10:26 PM
Hopefully this will be the last round...I think there are a few minor things they need to fix/add and then we'll be done!
 
anecdote of the day: Enrico Fermi did not usually take notes, but during the 1948 Pocono conference he took voluminous notes during Julian Schwinger’s lecture. When he got back to Chicago, he assembled a group consisting of two professors, Edward Teller and Gregory Wentzel, and four graduate students, Geoff Chew, Murph Goldberger, Marshall Rosenbluth, and Chen-Ning Yang (all to become major figures later).
The group met in Fermi’s office several times a week, a couple of hours each time, to try to figure out what Schwinger had done. After 6 weeks, everyone was exhausted. Then someone asked, “Didn’t Feynman also speak?” The three professors, who had attended the conference, said yes. But when pressed, not Fermi, nor Teller, nor Wentzel could recall what Feynman had said. All they remembered was his strange notation: p with a funny slash through it.
 
Common story, don't know where I heard it first
 
I just read it in Anthony Zee's QFT book
 
Oh, I imagine that's where I got it from :P
 
I like him filling them with these little stories
 
10:30 PM
I've met Zee, I can't figure out if he's exactly like I expected him to be, or totally different
 
What I remember is that if you have a countable collection of real numbers, such as the rationals in $[0,1]$, then you can surround each of the points by open intervals of length $\varepsilon/2^n, n \geq 1$, so that the measure of the set is less than or equal to $\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{\varepsilon}{2^n} = \varepsilon$, since $ \varepsilon$ is arbitrary, your set is of measure zero, if you try to cover $[0,1]$ in this way $\varepsilon$ is not arbitrary.
 
the disgraced books shelf
actually that particle physics book is very good
 
where's Weinberg vol. 3?
 
ahahah why disgraced?
 
10:31 PM
not disgraced, I assume :P
 
@BenNiehoff I gave up understanding the man halfway through volume 2
 
lol, I dunno why I bought his books. I have never read them at all
 
@Runlikehell quantum field theory is nonsense
 
is it that terse? I only read good stuff about his books, I'm a total beginner so i can't say anythign about them
 
...who has good things to say about Weinberg's books?
 
10:32 PM
@0celo7 that's how i feel towards it, but i'll wait to study as much as you did before saying out loud
 
@0celo7 my example covers $\mathbb{Q} \cap [0,1]$ but does not necessarily cover $[0,1]$ if you make $\varepsilon$ small enough
 
right now it's nonsense just cause I don't get it
 
@Runlikehell it really is nonsense
 
@0celo7 Shoo, you mathematician
 
objectively
I dare any physicist to prove me wrong
 
10:33 PM
quantum field theory is like the Millennium Falcon...it's practically falling apart, and yet it can still make the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs
 
@0celo7 We are not bound by your notions of proof!
(That's not a joke)
 
@0celo7 My professors and a couple of phd students in my university I asked some advice had only good words about Weinberg's books
 
I really like his GR book
 
@0celo7 I will buy your Zee and Becker for $5 each
 
As a "if you can't see it in the night sky, it doesn't exist" guy I think it's wonderful
 
10:35 PM
@Runlikehell Weinberg is an excellent place to find new bits and insights if you already know QFT and can decipher his idiosyncratic notation. It's a terrible place if you want to learn it.
 
How could any human being write GSW volume 2
 
@ACuriousMind have you ever read the chapter on the cluster decomposition principle?
 
@0celo7 I dimly recall it
 
@ACuriousMind That's exactly what they told me eheh.
 
I dunno why, but I only just realized that I've met all three of GSW, and yet I don't own their book
oh well
 
10:36 PM
@bolbteppa no
 
Been waiting a long time to get them, hardcover too, very worth it
 
@BenNiehoff It is a bit outdated anyway, considering it was written before the 2nd revolution, iirc.
 
@0celo7 can you expand your argument about QFT being nonsense? I dislike it mainly cause i'm having an hard time transitioning from a bachelor in astrophysics to a master in theoretical physics, but me having an hard time is not enough to justify my frustration
 
well, but it has a lot of fundamental stuff in it
 
so can you help me to justify it a little bit ahhaha?
 
10:39 PM
yo, check this out
absolute genius
sublime trolling at its very best
 
Did you know Bill Nye likes to swing dance? My wife has danced with him :)
 
I sincerely wonder how it would have been growing up with Bill Nye show, it must have been great for a kid to come back home and watch it
 
@Runlikehell That frustration wont go away
 
@BenNiehoff I'm somehow not surprised at all
 
as for me, being one of those kids who grew up occasionally watching his show, I was too shy to say hello :P
but apparently he was super incognito, like "Hello, my name is William"
 
10:44 PM
@BenNiehoff Your claims of having met everyone mentioned in this chat are beginning to make me a tad suspicious ;)
 
of what?
 
have you met Hakwing?
 
my office was a few doors down from Michael Green's for two years...and a few doors further down was Hawking
 
wtf
 
@bolbteppa But why is that? It seem I can't find a person that truly likes it. My professor is everything but passionate about it for example
 
10:46 PM
@Runlikehell I think many people are having a hard time with QFT because it's not as settled as other subjects. Most of the stuff they learned before QFT is something we've known for a while to be basically "done", several iterations of books and papers went over refining those subjects and nowadays they can be taught in a more-or-less easily digestible manner by a competent lecturer
 
Because it's hard as f, it's amazing but tough
 
@BenNiehoff You're a Boilermaker??
 
was, I guess
 
my dad is too
and sister
 
My advice is to read Landau's QM chapter on identical particles very carefully if QFT makes no sense
 
10:47 PM
But QFT is not - we're still figuring it out, really. Don't let the fact that there are "textbooks" fool you, there are so many different approaches to QFT and everyone claims to have the right one but no one really has figured out how it "should" be done
 
@Runlikehell My frustration with QFT has little to do with it being difficult or poorly explains, it's that (interacting QFT in 4 dimensions) it is not well-defined.
 
How you get from normal QM to the number formalism and creation/annihilation operators and wave functions as linear combinations of operators is sincerely mental unless you read that chapter
 
@bolbteppa Is it on Landau 3 or 4?
 
3
Then look at 4 after that chapter, poetry
 
@BenNiehoff How did you go from CS to ST?
 
10:48 PM
It's not this neat thing of what a "physical theory" is in classical mechanics or hydrodynamics or whatever, it's a huge mess of different approaches and explanations and arguments and tools that somehow all fit together but how exactly is a matter of spirited debate.
 
@0celo7 A string of luck, probably
 
Hello all
 
I think a whole lot of people in ST are way smarter than me, so it sure isn't that
 
It just seems like a strange career path is all
 
oh, I always wanted to do physics...but picked engineering because it pays the bills
and then I realized that was a dumb decision
 
10:51 PM
If I have the Lagrangian of a system, derive the equations of motion, and then solve the coupled differential equations, what is left to do in order to find the normal modes and vibrational frequencies? The scenario is a double well with one particle in each. Both particles are connected by a spring. I could probably work through the details but I just need someone to point me in the correct general direction.
 
@BenNiehoff You said you're 32?
 
Ok, my calculations initially put you in college at 15 ;P
 
lol, no
 
I found you linkedin if you're wondering
 
10:53 PM
There was a 15-year old in my year when I started uni
 
I figured, since I've never put up an academic website with a CV
 
@ACuriousMind Ben isn't that smart :P
 
@0celo7 More than not well defined it looks like a mess to me so far. It is all formal manipulation, so it looks more abstract and less physical than anything i've studied so far, at the same time this manipulations are sometimes sick and they make it depart from mathematics too
 
yeah, we had a 14-year-old in my freshman engineering class, I think
when he graduated he went off to some high-powered job at Microsoft
 
@Runlikehell If you want a mind bender you need to ask what the hell $\int D\phi\, e^{iS(\phi)}$ is really supposed to be
try to write down an $\epsilon-\delta$ definition if you know what I mean
@BenNiehoff I've seen a kid around campus who looks very young
clearly not in puberty
 
10:55 PM
there's always one
 
maybe it's just delayed or whatever
 
it's usually some professor's kid
 
@bolbteppa Thank you, I'll check them out. So Landau 4 is an option for studying QFT you think?
 
@BenNiehoff no, I mean he was in one of my classes
 
@0celo7 Dunno whether this one was smart either. :P Didn't really know her, and she vanished to somewhere else after a year or so
 
10:55 PM
yes, that's what I mean
 
@Runlikehell roughly, if you apply Heisenberg ("there is no concept of the path of a particle", ch. 1 sec. 1) to more than one identical particle, you get what Landau calls 'the principle of indistinguishability', and so you immediately see the notion of coordinates $x_1, x_2$ of multi-particle wave functions $\psi(x_1,x_2)$ etc... lose the relevance they once had
you need new less redundant variables, such as the number of particles in a given stationary state, for example. Hence the number formalism. To get it, you note that a Hamiltonian which acts on single particle wave functions at a time merely changes the stationary state the wave function was in, so QM becomes a theory of probability distributions for the numbers of particles in stationary states, and you can derive the explicit formalism basically from this calculation (if you push it)
 
some professor's kid is really smart and is taking college classes
I took a college class when I was 15...during the summer. I didn't actually start college until the normal time
 
@0celo7 We actually introduced it last week, he explictly told us it has no mathematical meaning at all, not to worry about it...
 
@Runlikehell I would say read Maggiore and Peskin and Srednicki and Kaku and Mandl and every f***ing book on qft and there is no other way :(
 
@Runlikehell lol
Then ask yourself what the canonical CCRs mean in QFT
 
10:58 PM
If you follow that procedure through a little bit, you will explicitly derive the commutation relations for fields that QFT books postulate as axioms, and you can get both Fermi/Bose commutation relations directly, so you can see where QFT came from
 
my LinkedIn is out of date, of course
and I kinda hate that website, so who knows when I'll get around to fixing it
 
@BenNiehoff oh. I did that too
Didn't think of it that way
He looked younger than 15
 
the path integral is kind of a mess of things that all diverge or converge to 0
But somewhat all of it cancels out
 

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