Statistical mechanics is our tool for deriving the laws that emerge from
complex systems. Sethna's text distills the subject to be accessible to
those in all realms of science and engineering -- avoiding extensive use
of quantum mechanics, thermodynamics, and molecular physics. Statistical
mechanics explains how bacteria search for food, and how DNA replication
is proof-read in biology; optimizes data compression, and explains
transitions in complexity in computer science; explains the onset of
chaos, and launched random matrix theory in mathematics; addresses
extreme events in engineering; and models pandemics and language usage
in the social sciences. Sethna's exercises introduce physicists to these
triumphs and a hundred others -- broadening the horizons of scholars
both practicing and nascent. Flipped classrooms and remote learning can
now rely on 33 pre-class exercises that test reading comprehension
(Emergent vs. fundamental; Weirdness in high dimensions; Aging,
entropy
and DNA), and 70 in-class activities that illuminate and broaden
knowledge (Card shuffling; Human correlations; Crackling noises).
Science is awash in information, providing ready access to definitions,
explanations, and pedagogy. Sethna's text focuses on the tools we use to
create new laws, and on the fascinating simple behavior in complex
systems that statistical mechanics explains.