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so, I've tried several books. but many of them weren't designed to suit beginners such as myself. thus, being a beginner is completely related. in my case starting off with the motion, equations is the ideal start point {proof is ESSENTIAL}.

Qmechanic
  • 201,751
  • Possible duplicates: https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/363/2451 and links therein. – Qmechanic Mar 28 '21 at 21:51
  • “Beginner” can mean many things. Do you know calculus? Do you know any classical mechanics? Do you know Special Relativity? Have you ever seen a tensor? Are you in high school, university, or graduate school? – G. Smith Mar 28 '21 at 23:10
  • You can see the equation of motion, and three derivations of it, here. – G. Smith Mar 28 '21 at 23:17
  • When I was about 16, I read the book by Lillian Lieber mentioned in some of the answers to the linked question. It was extremely influential on me. – G. Smith Mar 29 '21 at 00:07

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