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Originally published at the height of the first revolution in string theory, these two volumes went on to define the field. Volume 2 focuses on one-loop amplitudes, anomalies and phenomenology. Featuring a new Preface, this book is invaluable for graduate students and researchers in high energy physics and astrophysics.
An introduction to the analytic theory of automorphic forms, limited to the case of fuchsian groups, but from the point of view of the general theory, ending with an introduction to unitary infinite dimensional representations. The main prerequisites are familiarity with functional analysis and elementary Lie theory.
This volume concentrates on the changes in religious thought and institutions in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
Quantum mechanics is our most successful physical theory but raises conceptual issues that perplex physicists and philosophers of science. This 2004 book develops an approach, based on the proposal that quantum theory is not a complete, final theory, but in fact an emergent phenomenon arising from a deeper level of dynamics.
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