If I have a function $\ f(x)$, what does it mean for it to be Lorentz invariant? I believe it is that $\ f( \Lambda^{-1}x ) = f(x)$, but I think I'm missing something here.
Furthermore, if $g(x,y)$ is Lorentz invariant, does this means that $g(\Lambda^{-1}x,\Lambda^{-1}y)=g(x,y)$?
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EDIT: Allow me to explain the source of my confusion....I've been looking at resources online, where it says that the definition should be $\phi^{\prime}(x^{\prime})=\phi(x)$. But $\phi^{\prime}(x)=\phi(\Lambda^{-1}x)$ under a Lorentz transformation $x^{\prime}=\Lambda x$. So then I get:
$\phi^{\prime}(x^{\prime})=\phi(\Lambda^{-1}x^{\prime})=\phi(\Lambda^{-1}\Lambda x)=\phi(x)$
This seems completely trivial, and doesn't look like a condition I would need to check on a case-by-case basic.