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Ape Genius…. the main difference with humans is spiritual

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Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › Ape Genius…. the main difference with humans is spiritual

  • This topic has 11 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 11 months ago by Dog.
Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
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  • May 4, 2008 at 10:01 pm #28308
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    Note: most interesting idea in this article is that apes don’t build on other apes discoveries – what we call externally as science, and i call internally as spiritual science. This is what leads to higher cultural and moral evolution. We have too much external science evolving quickly, and not enough intenral science. It’s causing humans to go a bit mad… and turn into violence apes.
    -michael

    PE GENIUS REVEALS DEPTH OF ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE
    By Paul Eccleston
    The Telegraph
    May 2, 2008

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/earth/20
    08/05/02/eachimp102.xml

    Chimpanzees in Senegal make and sharpen spears with their teeth to go
    hunting. Like our own ancestors they have learned to use tools to kill their
    quarry more effectively.

    They use their colossal strength to thrust their spears into holes in trees
    where they suspect nocturnal bushbabies are sleeping.

    Anthropologist Jill Pruetz believes she has made a landmark discovery — a
    species other than humans learning — and passing on — the skills to make a
    lethal weapon.

    The generation of ideas and sharing a skill is a scientific definition of
    culture.

    In another part of Africa a young chimp lowers himself gingerly into a
    cooling pool and squealing with excitement — in exactly the same way as a
    human child would. Apes are supposed to be afraid of water but this one is
    actively using the water as a tool to enjoy a dip.

    In controlled laboratory experiments another chimpanzee called Judy quickly
    learns how to use a complex series of manoeuvres, turning wheels and pulling
    handles in order, to obtain a piece of fruit from a specially constructed
    wooden slot machine. But even more remarkably other chimps watch her success
    and then learn the skill themselves.

    Learning by imitation is regarded as an essential skill for culture.

    Apes display rudimentary traditions which could be interpreted as culture
    but are they really bright enough to develop a proper culture?

    The apes are all stars of a new film — Ape Genius
    <http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/apegenius/> — which gives a fascinating
    insight into the depth of intelligence of animals who share 99 per cent of
    human genes. In it they reveal the skills, reasoning powers and emotions
    that were once thought to be uniquely human.

    The stars include Koko a gorilla who understands sign language, Azy an
    orangutan maths champion, and Kanzi a bonobo who understands more than 3,000
    words of English.

    The film demonstrates that apes are more like us than we ever imagined and
    only the lack of a few mental skills has prevented them making the giant
    evolutionary development steps taken by their human cousins.

    What’s the little difference that makes the big difference and how big is
    the gap between Them and Us?, the film asks.

    In west Africa Japanese researchers watch a mother care for sick
    two-years-old infant. She puts her paw on his forehead in exactly the way as
    a parent would check for a temperature in a child. As the baby chimp’s life
    ebbs away she cares for him devotedly and when he dies she carries him
    around on her back for weeks almost refusing to accept that he is gone.

    It is impossible to know what she is thinking but not difficult to recognise
    that she is stricken with grief.

    “When I see the scene of the mother looking at the baby, I really recognise
    the emotional life of chimpanzees are so similar to us,” says one of the
    researchers.

    But if apes have the power to reason, learn skills, feel emotion and
    co-operate in a frenzied tree-top hunt for Colobus monkeys as chimpanzees
    do, why don’t we have a planet of the apes?

    The film reveals that although apes will co-operate to obtain food they
    don’t have a shared commitment, they don’t have the passion to urge or cheer
    on a tribe member and they do not have control of their emotions. They are
    also violent, impulsive and display deadly rivalry.

    Although they can be taught to recognise symbols and words they don’t have
    the mental capacity to contribute to a ‘conversation’ — and they don’t make
    small talk. And most important of all although they can imitate, they can’t
    teach or build on the achievements others have made — unlike more
    successful humans.

    Their mental rocket is on the launch pad but it hasn’t taken off, the film
    concludes.

    ………….

    Ape Genius will be shown on the National Geographic Wild Channel:
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/apegenius/

    May 5, 2008 at 8:12 am #28309
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    note: this article expands on the idea in the article on apes – how scientific ideas feed its own growth with exponential factors of expansion. The real question facing humanity: can we multiply spiritual consciousness by the same factor of growth? This is where sharing of spiritual “tools” , ie. methods of expanding and stabilizing awareness – are so crucial to maintaining balance and harmony on the planet. Even the spread of a simple technology like the Inner Smile can revolutionize the rate of spiritual growth. The challenge is to find spiritual methods that are universal and yet simple in their application. I’ve found that Taoist spiritual technology fits the bill, but has to unwrap the secrecy its been held in. – Michael

    EXPECT EXPONENTIAL PROGRESS
    RAPID GAINS IN TECHNOLOGY POINT TO A BRIGHT FUTURE
    By Ray Kurzweil
    Christian Science Monitor
    April 18, 2008

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0418/p09s01-coop.html

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology was so advanced in 1965 that it
    actually had a computer. Housed in its own building, it cost $11 million (in
    today’s dollars) and was shared by all students and faculty. Four decades
    later, the computer in your cellphone is a million times smaller, a million
    times less expensive, and a thousand times more powerful. That’s a
    billionfold increase in the amount of computation you can buy per dollar.

    Yet as powerful as information technology is today, we will make another
    billionfold increase in capability (for the same cost) over the next 25
    years. That’s because information technology builds on itself — we are
    continually using the latest tools to create the next so they grow in
    capability at an exponential rate. This doesn’t just mean snazzier
    cellphones. It means that change will rock every aspect of our world. The
    exponential growth in computing speed will unlock a solution to global
    warming and solve myriad other worldly conundrums.

    Thanks to its exponential power, only technology possesses the scale to
    address the major challenges — such as energy and the environment, disease
    and poverty — confronting society.

    Take energy. Today, 70 percent of it comes from fossil fuels, a 19th-century
    technology. But if we could capture just 1/10,000th of the sunlight that
    falls on Earth, we could meet 100 percent of the world’s energy needs using
    this renewable and environmentally friendly source. We can’t do that now
    because solar panels rely on old technology, making them expensive,
    inefficient, heavy, and hard to install. But a new generation of panels
    based on nanotechnology is starting to overcome these obstacles. The tipping
    point at which energy from solar panels will actually be less expensive than
    fossil fuels is only a few years away. The power we are generating from
    solar is doubling every two years; at that rate, it will be able to meet all
    energy needs within 20 years.

    Nanotechnology itself is an information technology and therefore subject to
    what I call the “law of accelerating returns,” a continual doubling of
    capability about every year. I’m confident that the day is close at hand
    when we will be able to obtain energy from sunlight using nanoengineered
    solar panels and store it for use on cloudy days in nanoengineered fuel
    cells for less than it costs to use environmentally damaging fossil fuels.

    It’s important to understand that exponentials seem slow at first. In the
    mid-1990s, halfway through the Human Genome Project to identify all the
    genes in human DNA, researchers had succeeded in collecting only 1 percent
    of the human genome. But the amount of genetic data was doubling every year,
    and that is actually right on schedule for an exponential progression. The
    project was slated to take 15 years, and if you double 1 percent seven more
    times you surpass 100 percent. In fact, the project was finished two years
    early. This helps explain why people underestimate what is technologically
    feasible over long periods of time — they think linearly while the actual
    course of progress is exponential.

    What’s more, this exponential progression of information technology will
    affect our prosperity as well. The World Bank has reported, for example,
    that poverty in Asia has been cut in half over the past decade due to
    information technologies and that at current rates it will be cut by another
    90 percent over the next decade. That phenomenon will spread around the
    globe.

    Clearly, the transformation of our 21st-century world is under way, and
    information technology, in all its forms, is helping the future look
    brighter … exponentially.

    May 6, 2008 at 12:21 am #28311
    Intelligence
    Participant

    seems to me that they essentially are us…

    they seem just as real and consious as we do…

    same patterns, maybe just a bit of articulation and refinement..

    which brings in the whole issue of what evolution is doing…

    why would a process of blind and erroneous mutation produce more articulate and refined electrical symmetries?

    then there is spiritual issue…

    it seems there consiousness is just on a different wavelength..

    the real pickle with this is this spiritual/bardo/astral consiousness..

    it looks to me like a reincarnating human spirit must be existing on a wavelngth closer to atomic or subatomic light systems…

    something like z ero point or implosion point which is what we experience as the simulatenous spark of being connected at our human-ness..

    in other words..

    our “human” spiritual self may be born out of the revolutions of atomic and subsuqntum light fields and may be what reincarnates, like a torch of implosion within the crown..

    this higher atomic symmetry seems like a natural home to galactic/bardo, mathemetaical, and geometric consiousness… light beings..

    I still think the primates are basically all just on different wavelengths..

    May 6, 2008 at 12:25 am #28313
    Intelligence
    Participant

    seems like the difference with primates is that there systems are
    simply oscillating at a different structural frequency..

    perhaps also connected via one “heart” emotional system…

    but in comparison to humans you are talking about a rarely accessed higher self which is INSIDE

    and connected to a different continuum…

    essentially holographic image oscillation fields connected into a universal quantum substratum…

    May 7, 2008 at 2:15 am #28315
    Intelligence
    Participant

    as in,

    not becoming part of an out of control zero substance total waste chaotic storm whirlling towards total annihilation with zero meaning…

    every time someone sacrifices their self sustance for someone elses technology they have just weakened their seed-egg essence and succumbed to oblivion…

    crap crap and more crap… all wasted paper wreckage under a shallow christmas tree..

    while the children barf up their toys

    May 7, 2008 at 1:22 pm #28317
    Dog
    Participant

    Thats the question few scientist seem to press. Why out of every single species on the face of the earth is there only on kind of hominid? They know that some thing happened one hundred thousand years ago to make all other hominid species unable to compete.

    May 8, 2008 at 9:49 pm #28319
    spongebob
    Participant

    >Thats the question few scientist seem to press.<

    That's a actually a question a lot of scientists are burning to answer and there is a significant amount of research on it. In fact, the whole human family tree has been redrawn so many times as new knowledge comes to light, what u learned in high school or college is completely obsolete.

    Most of the research in trying to answer this focuses on Neanderthals, modern homo sapiens, Home erectus (which they now believe is NOT an H. sapiens ancestor), and the new finds of dwarf humans in SE Asia.

    Its a compelling question that science is working hard to answer.

    Of course, I'd like to see Michael's take on it and how his research into Atlantis will rewrite human evolution and civilization.

    May 14, 2008 at 4:19 am #28321
    Jernej
    Participant

    bellow is a short bio of nikola tesla
    it omitts his love for thunder and also his loud selfdebating at such times
    but otherwise is quite telling
    how many homo sapiens individuals are willing to go the line
    not many homos i guess
    (note: gay is not a homosexual for he does not love the human in other human, but the man or woman inside of him. APA considers it a derogatory description of gay and lesbian practioners, when used in such context that is.)

    THE STRANGE LIFE OF NIKOLA TESLA.

    The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla

    Editors Note, August 28, 1995

    This text has been entered by John R.H. Penner from a small booklet found in a
    used bookstore for $2.50. The only form of date identification is the name of the
    original purchaser, Arthua Daine (?), dated April 29, 1978.
    The book appears to be considerably older, made with typewriters, and then
    photocopied and stapled. The only other significant features of the booklet is that it
    contains four photocopied photographs of Tesla, and was originally forty pages
    long. I must apologise for the qualitty of the scans, but the originals were of very
    poor quality, and this is the best that could be obtained after touching-up in
    Photoshop.

    The book has no Copyright identification, nor any means of contacting the
    publishers. As far as I am aware, this autobiography is no longer available in printed
    form anywhere.

    In the interest of making this important text available to the wider public, I have
    retyped the entire text word-for-word as it originally appears into this electronic
    format. The only words which appear in this file, that are not in the original book
    are this Editors Note, and the Introduction. I have exactly maintained page numbers
    as they appear in the original – including the somewhat odd artifact of Chapter 1
    starting on page two.

    If anyone knows how to reach the original publisher, please contact me at the below
    address, so proper credit may be given where it is due.
    John Roland Hans Penner
    464 Scott Street
    St. Catharines, Ontario
    L2M 3W7, Canada
    Phone: 905.646.3551
    eMail: J.Penner@GEnie.GEIS.com

    This file may be freely redistributed as long as it’s content is not modified in any
    way. It may not be sold or published for profit unless specifically authorised prior to
    publication by the express permission of Kolmogorov- Smirnov Publishing, or John
    R.H. Penner. Unless otherwise notified, this work is Copyright ©1995 by John R.H.
    Penner.

    ii.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla

    Introduction
    Nikola Tesla was born in Croatia (then part of Austria-Hungary) on July 9, 1856,
    and died January 7, 1943. He was the electrical engineer who invented the AC
    (alternating current) induction motor, which made the universal transmission and
    distribution of electricity possible. Tesla began his studies in physics and
    mathematics at Graz Polytechnic, and then took philosophy at the University of
    Prague. He worked as an electrical engineer in Budapest, Hungary, and
    subsequently in France and Germany. In 1888 his discovery that a magnetic field
    could be made to rotate if two coils at right angles are supplied with AC current
    90° out of phase made possible the invention of the AC induction motor. The major
    advantage of this motor being its brushless operation, which many at the time
    believed impossible.
    Tesla moved to the United States in 1884, where he worked for Thomas Edison
    who quickly became a rival – Edison being an advocate of the inferior DC power
    transmission system. During this time, Tesla was commissioned with the design of
    the AC generators installed at Niagara Falls. George Westinghouse purchased the
    patents to his induction motor, and made it the basis of the Westinghouse power
    system which still underlies the modern electrical power industry today.
    He also did notable research on high-voltage electricity and wireless
    communication; at one point creating an earthquake which shook the ground for
    several miles around his New York laboratory. He also devised a system which
    anticipated world-wide wireless communications, fax machines, radar, radio-guided
    missiles and aircraft.

    iii.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla iv
    NIKOLA TESLA IS THE TRUE UNSUNG
    PROPHET OF THE ELECTRIC AGE!;
    without whom our radio, auto ignition,
    telephone, alternating current power
    generation and transmission, radio and
    television would all have been impossible.
    Yet his life and times have vanished largely
    from public access.
    This AUTOBIOGRAPHY is released to remedy this
    situation, and to fill this “BLACK HOLE”
    in information space.
    ©Kolmogorov- Smirnov Publishing..The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla v.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla vi
    October 13, 1933.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla 1.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    Chapter 1
    My Early Life
    By Nikola Tesla
    The progressive development of man is vitally dependent on invention. It is the
    most important product of his creative brain. Its ultimate purpose is the complete
    mastery of mind over the material world, the harnessing of the forces of nature to
    human needs. This is the difficult task of the inventor who is often misunderstood
    and unrewarded. But he finds ample compensation in the pleasing exercises of his
    powers and in the knowledge of being one of that exceptionally privileged class
    without whom the race would have long ago perished in the bitter struggle against
    pitiless elements. Speaking for myself, I have already had more than my full
    measure of this exquisite enjoyment; so much, that for many years my life was little
    short of continuous rapture. I am credited with being one of the hardest workers and
    perhaps I am, if thought is the equivalent of labour, for I have devoted to it almost
    all of my waking hours. But if work is interpreted to be a definite performance in a
    specified time according to a rigid rule, then I may be the worst of idlers.
    Every effort under compulsion demands a sacrifice of life-energy. I never paid such
    a price. On the contrary, I have thrived on my thoughts. In attempting to give a
    connected and faithful account of my activities in this story of my life, I must dwell,
    however reluctantly, on the impressions of my youth and the circumstances and
    events which have been instrumental in determining my career. Our first endeavours
    are purely instinctive promptings of an imagination vivid and undisciplined. As we
    grow older reason asserts itself and we become more and more systematic and
    designing. But those early impulses, though not immediately productive, are of the
    greatest moment and may shape our very destinies. Indeed, I feel now that had I
    understood and cultivated instead of suppressing them, I would have added
    substantial value to my bequest to the world. But not until I had attained manhood
    did I realise that I was an inventor.
    This was due to a number of causes. In the first place I had a brother who was gifted
    to an extraordinary degree; one of those rare phenomena of mentality which
    biological investigation has failed to explain. His premature death left my earth
    parents disconsolate. (I will explain my remark about my “earth parents” later.) We
    owned a horse which had been presented to us by a dear friend. It was a magnificent
    animal of Arabian breed, possessed of almost human intelligence, and was cared for
    and petted by the whole family, having on one occasion saved my dear father’s life
    under remarkable circumstances.
    My father had been called one winter night to perform an urgent duty and while
    crossing the mountains, infested by wolves, the horse became frightened and ran
    away, throwing him violently to the ground. It arrived home bleeding and
    exhausted, but after the alarm was sounded, immediately dashed off again, returning
    to the spot, and before the searching party were far on the way they were met by my
    father, who had recovered consciousness and remounted, not realising that he had
    been lying in the snow for several hours. This horse was responsible for my
    brother’s injuries from which he died. I witnessed the tragic scene and although so
    many years have elapsed since, my visual impression of it has lost none of its force.
    The recollection of his attainments made every effort of mine seem dull in
    comparison. Anything I did that was creditable merely caused my parents to feel
    their loss more keenly. So I grew up with little confidence in myself.
    2.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    But I was far from being considered a stupid boy, if I am to judge from an incident
    of which I have still a strong remembrance. One day the Aldermen were passing
    through a street where I was playing with other boys. The oldest of these venerable
    gentlemen, a wealthy citizen, paused to give a silver piece to each of us. Coming to
    me, he suddenly stopped and commanded, “Look in my eyes.” I met his gaze, my
    hand outstretched to receive the much valued coin, when to my dismay, he said,
    “No, not much; you can get nothing from me. You are too smart.”
    They used to tell a funny story about me. I had two old aunts with wrinkled faces,
    one of them having two teeth protruding like the tusks of an elephant, which she
    buried in my cheek every time she kissed me. Nothing would scare me more then
    the prospects of being by these affectionate, unattractive relatives. It happened that
    while being carried in my mother’s arms, they asked who was the prettier of the
    two. After examining their faces intently, I answered thoughtfully, pointing to one
    of them, “This here is not as ugly as the other.”
    Then again, I was intended from my very birth, for the clerical profession and this
    thought constantly oppressed me. I longed to be an engineer, but my father was
    inflexible. He was the son of an officer who served in the army of the Great
    Napoleon and in common with his brother, professor of mathematics in a prominent
    institution, had received a military education; but, singularly enough, later
    embraced the clergy in which vocation he achieved eminence. He was a very
    erudite man, a veritable natural philosopher, poet and writer and his sermons were
    said to be as eloquent as those of Abraham a-Sancta-Clara. He had a prodigious
    memory and frequently recited at length from works in several languages. He often
    remarked playfully that if some of the classics were lost he could restore them. His
    style of writing was much admired. He penned sentences short and terse and full of
    wit and satire. The humorous remarks he made were always peculiar and
    characteristic. Just to illustrate, I may mention one or two instances.
    Among the help, there was a cross-eyed man called Mane, employed to do work
    around the farm. He was chopping wood one day. As he swung the axe, my father,
    who stood nearby and felt very uncomfortable, cautioned him, “For God’s sake,
    Mane, do not strike at what you are looking but at what you intend to hit.”
    On another occasion he was taking out for a drive, a friend who carelessly permitted
    his costly fur coat to rub on the carriage wheel. My father reminded him of it
    saying, “Pull in your coat; you are ruining my tire.”
    He had the odd habit of talking to himself and would often carry on an animated
    conversation and indulge in heated argument, changing the tone of his voice. A
    casual listener might have sworn that several people were in the room.
    Although I must trace to my mother’s influence whatever inventiveness I possess,
    the training he gave me must have been helpful. It comprised all sorts of exercises -as,
    guessing one another’s thoughts, discovering the defects of some form of
    expression, repeating long sentences or performing mental calculations. These daily
    lessons were intended to strengthen memory and reason, and especially to develop
    the critical sense, and were undoubtedly very beneficial.
    My mother descended from one of the oldest families in the country and a line of
    inventors. Both her father and grandfather originated numerous implements for
    household, agricultural and other uses. She was a truly great woman,
    3.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    of rare skill, courage and fortitude, who had braved the storms of life and passed
    through many a trying experience. When she was sixteen, a virulent pestilence
    swept the country. Her father was called away to administer the last sacraments to
    the dying and during his absence she went alone to the assistance of a neighbouring
    family who were stricken by the dread disease. She bathed, clothed and laid out the
    bodies, decorating them with flowers according to the custom of the country and
    when her father returned he found everything ready for a Christian burial.
    My mother was an inventor of the first order and would, I believe, have achieved
    great things had she not been so remote from modern life and its multifold
    opportunities. She invented and constructed all kinds of tools and devices and wove
    the finest designs from thread which was spun by her. She even planted seeds,
    raised the plants and separated the fibres herself. She worked indefatigably, from
    break of day till late at night, and most of the wearing apparel and furnishings of the
    home were the product of her hands. When she was past sixty, her fingers were still
    nimble enough to tie three knots in an eyelash.
    There was another and still more important reason for my late awakening. In my
    boyhood I suffered from a peculiar affliction due to the appearance of images, often
    accompanied by strong flashes of light, which marred the sight of real objects and
    interfered with my thoughts and action. They were pictures of things and scenes
    which i had really seen, never of those imagined. When a word was spoken to me
    the image of the object it designated would present itself vividly to my vision and
    sometimes I was quite unable to distinguish weather what I saw was tangible or not.
    This caused me great discomfort and anxiety. None of the students of psychology or
    physiology whom i have consulted, could ever explain satisfactorily these
    phenomenon. They seem to have been unique although I was probably predisposed
    as I know that my brother experienced a similar trouble. The theory I have
    formulated is that the images were the result of a reflex action from the brain on the
    retina under great excitation. They certainly were not hallucinations such as are
    produced in diseased and anguished minds, for in other respects i was normal and
    composed. To give an idea of my distress, suppose that I had witnessed a funeral or
    some such nerve-wracking spectacle. The, inevitably, in the stillness of night, a
    vivid picture of the scene would thrust itself before my eyes and persist despite all
    my efforts to banish it. If my explanation is correct, it should be possible to project
    on a screen the image of any object one conceives and make it visible. Such an
    advance would revolutionise all human relations. I am convinced that this wonder
    can and will be accomplished in time to come. I may add that I have devoted much
    thought to the solution of the problem.
    I have managed to reflect such a picture, which i have seen in my mind, to the mind
    of another person, in another room. To free myself of these tormenting appearances,
    I tried to concentrate my mind on something else I had seen, and in this way I
    would often obtain temporary relief; but in order to get it I had to conjure
    continuously new images. It was not long before I found that I had exhausted all of
    those at my command; my ‘reel’ had run out as it were, because I had seen little of
    the world — only objects in my home and the immediate surroundings. As I
    performed these mental operations for the second or third time, in order to chase the
    appearances from my vision, the remedy gradually lost all its force. Then I
    instinctively commenced to make excursions beyond the limits of the small world
    of which I had knowledge, and I saw new scenes. These were at first very blurred
    and indistinct, and would flit away when I tried to concentrate my attention upon
    them. They gained in strength
    4.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    and distinctness and finally assumed the concreteness of real things. I soon
    discovered that my best comfort was attained if I simply went on in my vision
    further and further, getting new impressions all the time, and so I began to travel; of
    course, in my mind. Every night, (and sometimes during the day), when alone, I
    would start on my journeys — see new places, cities and countries; live there, meet
    people and make friendships and acquaintances and, however unbelievable, it is a
    fact that they were just as dear to me as those in actual life, and not a bit less intense
    in their manifestations.
    This I did constantly until I was about seventeen, when my thoughts turned
    seriously to invention. Then I observed to my delight that i could visualise with the
    greatest facility. I needed no models, drawings or experiments. I could picture them
    all as real in my mind. Thus I have been led unconsciously to evolve what I
    consider a new method of materialising inventive concepts and ideas, which is
    radially opposite to the purely experimental and is in my opinion ever so much
    more expeditious and efficient.
    The moment one constructs a device to carry into practice a crude idea, he finds
    himself unavoidably engrossed with the details of the apparatus. As he goes on
    improving and reconstructing, his force of concentration diminishes and he loses
    sight of the great underlying principle. Results may be obtained, but always at the
    sacrifice of quality. My method is different. I do not rush into actual work. When I
    get an idea, I start at once building it up in my imagination. I change the
    construction, make improvements and operate the device in my mind. It is
    absolutely immaterial to me whether I run my turbine in thought or test it in my
    shop. I even note if it is out of balance. There is no difference whatever; the results
    are the same. In this way I am able to rapidly develop and perfect a conception
    without touching anything. When I have gone so far as to embody in the invention
    every possible improvement I can think of and see no fault anywhere, I put into
    concrete form this final product of my brain. Invariably my device works as I
    conceived that it should, and the experiment comes out exactly as I planned it. In
    twenty years there has not been a single exception. Why should it be otherwise?
    Engineering, electrical and mechanical, is positive in results. There is scarcely a
    subject that cannot be examined beforehand, from the available theoretical and
    practical data. The carrying out into practice of a crude idea as is being generally
    done, is, I hold, nothing but a waste of energy, money, and time.
    My early affliction had however, another compensation. The incessant mental
    exertion developed my powers of observation and enabled me to discover a truth of
    great importance. I had noted that the appearance of images was always preceded
    by actual vision of scenes under peculiar and generally very exceptional conditions,
    and I was impelled on each occasion to locate the original impulse. After a while
    this effort grew to be almost automatic and I gained great facility in connecting
    cause and effect. Soon I became aware, to my surprise, that every thought I
    conceived was suggested by an external impression. Not only this but all my actions
    were prompted in a similar way. In the course of time it became perfectly evident to
    me that I was merely an automation endowed with power OF MOVEMENT
    RESPONDING TO THE STIMULI OF THE SENSE ORGANS AND THINKING
    AND ACTING ACCORDINGLY. The practical result of this was the art of
    teleautomatics which has been so far carried out only in an imperfect manner. Its
    latent possibilities will, however be eventually shown. I have been years planning
    self-controlled automata and believe that mechanisms can be produced which will
    act as if possessed of reason, to a limited degree, and will create a revolution in
    many commercial and industrial departments. I was about twelve years of age when
    I first succeeded in banishing an image from my vision by wilful effort, but I never
    had any control over the flashes of light to which
    5.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    I have referred. They were, perhaps, my strangest and [most] inexplicable
    experience. They usually occurred when I found myself in a dangerous or
    distressing situations or when i was greatly exhilarated. In some instances i have
    seen all the air around me filled with tongues of living flame. Their intensity,
    instead of diminishing, increased with time and seemingly attained a maximum
    when I was about twenty-five years old.
    While in Paris in 1883, a prominent French manufacturer sent me an invitation to a
    shooting expedition which I accepted. I had been long confined to the factory and
    the fresh air had a wonderfully invigorating effect on me. On my return to the city
    that night, I felt a positive sensation that my brain had caught fire. I was a light as
    though a small sun was located in it and I passed the whole night applying cold
    compressions to my tortured head. Finally the flashes diminished in frequency and
    force but it took more than three weeks before they wholly subsided. When a
    second invitation was extended to me, my answer was an emphatic NO!
    These luminous phenomena still manifest themselves from time to time, as when a
    new idea opening up possibilities strikes me, but they are no longer exciting, being
    of relatively small intensity. When I close my eyes I invariably observe first, a
    background of very dark and uniform blue, not unlike the sky on a clear but starless
    night. In a few seconds this field becomes animated with innumerable scintillating
    flakes of green, arranged in several layers and advancing towards me. Then there
    appears, to the right, a beautiful pattern of two systems of parallel and closely
    spaced lines, at right angles to one another, in all sorts of colours with yellow,
    green, and gold predominating. Immediately thereafter, the lines grow brighter and
    the whole is thickly sprinkled with dots of twinkling light. This picture moves
    slowly across the field of vision and in about ten seconds vanishes on the left,
    leaving behind a ground of rather unpleasant and inert grey until the second phase is
    reached. Every time, before falling asleep, images of persons or objects flit before
    my view. When I see them I know I am about to lose consciousness. If they are
    absent and refuse to come, it means a sleepless night. To what an extent imagination
    played in my early life, I may illustrate by another odd experience.
    Like most children, I was fond of jumping and developed an intense desire to
    support myself in the air. Occasionally a strong wind richly charged with oxygen
    blew from the mountains, rendering my body light as cork and then I would leap
    and float in space for a long time. It was a delightful sensation and my
    disappointment was keen when later I undeceived myself. During that period I
    contracted many strange likes, dislikes and habits, some of which I can trace to
    external impressions while others are unaccountable. I had a violent aversion
    against the earing of women, but other ornaments, as bracelets, pleased me more or
    less according to design. The sight of a pearl would almost give me a fit, but I was
    fascinated with the glitter of crystals or objects with sharp edges and plane surfaces.
    I would not touch the hair of other people except, perhaps at the point of a revolver.
    I would get a fever by looking at a peach and if a piece of camphor was anywhere in
    the house it caused me the keenest discomfort. Even now I am not insensible to
    some of these upsetting impulses. When I drop little squares of paper in a dish filled
    with liquid, I always sense a peculiar and awful taste in my mouth. I counted the
    steps in my walks and calculated the cubical contents of soup plates, coffee cups
    and pieces of food, otherwise my meal was unenjoyable. All repeated acts or
    operations I performed had to be divisible by three and if I missed I felt impelled to
    do it all over again, even if it took hours. Up to the age of eight years, my
    6.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    character was weak and vacillating. I had neither courage or strength to form a firm
    resolve. My feelings came in waves and surges and variated unceasingly between
    extremes. My wishes were of consuming force and like the heads of the hydra, they
    multiplied. I was oppressed by thoughts of pain in life and death and religious fear.
    I was swayed by superstitious belief and lived in constant dread of the spirit of evil,
    of ghosts and ogres and other unholy monsters of the dark. Then all at once, there
    came a tremendous change which altered the course of my whole existence.
    Of all things I liked books best. My father had a large library and whenever I could
    manage I tried to satisfy my passion for reading. He did not permit it and would fly
    in a rage when he caught me in the act. He hid the candles when he found that I was
    reading in secret. He did not want me to spoil my eyes. But I obtained tallow, made
    the wicking and cast the sticks into tin forms, and every night I would bush the
    keyhole and the cracks and read, often till dawn, when all others slept and my
    mother started on her arduous daily task.
    On one occasion I came across a novel entitled ‘Aoafi,’ (the son of Aba), a Serbian
    translation of a well known Hungarian writer, Josika. This work somehow
    awakened my dormant powers of will and I began to practice self-control. At first
    my resolutions faded like snow in April, but in a little while I conquered my
    weakness and felt a pleasure I never knew before — that of doing as I willed.
    In the course of time this vigorous mental exercise became second to nature. At the
    outset my wishes had to be subdued but gradually desire and will grew to be
    identical. After years of such discipline I gained so complete a mastery over myself
    that I toyed with passions which have meant destruction to some of the strongest
    men. At a certain age I contracted a mania for gambling which greatly worried my
    parents. To sit down to a game of cards was for me the quintessence of pleasure.
    My father led an exemplary life and could not excuse the senseless waste of my
    time and money in which I indulged. I had a strong resolve, but my philosophy was
    bad. I would say to him, ‘I can stop whenever I please, but it it worth while to give
    up that which I would purchase with the joys of paradise?’ On frequent occasions
    he gave vent to his anger and contempt, but my mother was different. She
    understood the character of men and knew that one’s salvation could only be
    brought about through his own efforts. One afternoon, I remember, when I had lost
    all my money and was craving for a game, she came to me with a roll of bills and
    said, ‘Go and enjoy yourself. The sooner you lose all we possess, the better it will
    be. I know that you will get over it.’ She was right. I conquered my passion then
    and there and only regretted that it had not been a hundred times as strong. I not
    only vanquished but tore it from my heart so as not to leave even a trace of desire.
    Ever since that time I have been as indifferent to any form of gambling as to picking
    teeth. During another period I smoked excessively, threatening to ruin my health.
    Then my will asserted itself and I not only stopped but destroyed all inclination.
    Long ago I suffered from heart trouble until I discovered that it was due to the
    innocent cup of coffee I consumed every morning. I discontinued at once, though I
    confess it was not an easy task. In this way I checked and bridled other habits and
    passions, and have not only preserved my life but derived an immense amount of
    satisfaction from what most men would consider privation and sacrifice.
    After finishing the studies at the Polytechnic Institute and University, I had a
    complete nervous breakdown and while the malady lasted I observed many
    phenomena, strange and unbelievable…
    7.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    Chapter 2
    I shall dwell briefly on these extraordinary experiences, on account of their possible
    interest to students of psychology and physiology and also because this period of
    agony was of the greatest consequence on my mental development and subsequent
    labours. But it is indispensable to first relate the circumstances and conditions
    which preceded them and in which might be found their partial explanation.
    From childhood I was compelled to concentrate attention upon myself. This caused
    me much suffering, but to my present view, it was a blessing in disguise for it has
    taught me to appreciate the inestimable value of introspection in the preservation of
    life, as well as a means of achievement. The pressure of occupation and the
    incessant stream of impressions pouring into our consciousness through all the
    gateways of knowledge make modern existence hazardous in many ways. Most
    persons are so absorbed in the contemplation of the outside world that they are
    wholly oblivious to what is passing on within themselves. The premature death of
    millions is primarily traceable to this cause. Even among those who exercise care, it
    is a common mistake to avoid imaginary, and ignore the real dangers. And what is
    true of an individual also applies, more or less, to a people as a whole.
    Abstinence was not always to my liking, but I find ample reward in the agreeable
    experiences I am now making. Just in the hope of converting some to my precepts
    and convictions I will recall one or two.
    A short time ago I was returning to my hotel. It was a bitter cold night, the ground
    slippery, and no taxi to be had. Half a block behind me followed another man,
    evidently as anxious as myself to get under cover. Suddenly my legs went up in the
    air. At the same instant there was a flash in my brain. The nerves responded, the
    muscles contracted. I swung 180 degrees and landed on my hands. I resumed my
    walk as though nothing had happened when the stranger caught up with me. “How
    old are you?” he asked, surveying me critically.
    “Oh, about fifty-nine,” I replied, “What of it?”
    “Well,” said he, “I have seen a cat do this but never a man.” About a month ago I
    wanted to order new eye glasses and went to an oculist who put me through the
    usual tests. He looked at me incredulously as I read off with ease the smallest print
    at considerable distance. But when I told him I was past sixty he gasped in
    astonishment. Friends of mine often remark that my suits fit me like gloves but they
    do not know that all my clothing is made to measurements which were taken nearly
    fifteen years ago and never changed. During this same period my weight has not
    varied one pound. In this connection I may tell a funny story.
    One evening, in the winter of 1885, Mr. Edison, Edward H. Johnson, the President
    of the Edison Illuminating Company, Mr. Batchellor, Manager of the works, and
    myself, entered a little place opposite 65 Firth Avenue, where the offices of the
    company were located. Someone suggested guessing weights and I was induced to
    step on a scale. Edison felt me all over and said: “Tesla weighs 152 lbs. to an
    ounce,” and he guessed it exactly. Stripped I weighed 142 pounds, and that is still
    my weight. I whispered to Mr. Johnson; “How is it possible that Edison could guess
    my weight so closely?”
    8.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    “Well,” he said, lowering his voice. “I will tell you confidentially, but you must not
    say anything. He was employed for a long time in a Chicago slaughter-house where
    he weighed thousands of hogs every day. That’s why.”
    My friend, the Hon. Chauncey M. Dupew, tells of an Englishman on whom he
    sprung one of his original anecdotes and who listened with a puzzled expression,
    but a year later, laughed out loud. I will frankly confess it took me longer than that
    to appreciate Johnson’s joke. Now, my well-being is simply the result of a careful
    and measured mode of living and perhaps the most astonishing thing is that three
    times in my youth I was rendered by illness a hopeless physical wreck and given up
    by physicians. MORE than this, through ignorance and lightheartedness, I got into
    all sorts of difficulties, dangers and scrapes from which I extricated myself as by
    enchantment. I was almost drowned, entombed, lost and frozen. I had hair-breadth
    escapes from mad dogs, hogs, and other wild animals. I passed through dreadful
    diseases and met with all kinds of odd mishaps and that I am whole and hearty
    today seems like a miracle. But as I recall these incidents to my mind I feel
    convinced that my preservation was not altogether accidental, but was indeed the
    work of divine power. An inventor’s endeavour is essentially life saving. Whether
    he harnesses forces, improves devices, or provides new comforts and conveniences,
    he is adding to the safety of our existence. He is also better qualified than the
    average individual to protect himself in peril, for he is observant and resourceful. If
    I had no other evidence that I was, in a measure, possessed of such qualities, I
    would find it in these personal experiences. The reader will be able to judge for
    himself if I mention one or two instances.
    On one occasion, when about fourteen years old, I wanted to scare some friends
    who were bathing with me. My plan was to dive under a long floating structure and
    slip out quietly at the other end. Swimming and diving came to me as naturally as to
    a duck and I was confident that I could perform the feat. Accordingly I plunged into
    the water and, when out of view, turned around and proceeded rapidly towards the
    opposite side. Thinking that I was safely beyond the structure, I rose to the surface
    but to my dismay struck a beam. Of course, I quickly dived and forged ahead with
    rapid strokes until my breath was beginning to give out. Rising for the second time,
    my head came again in contact with a beam. Now I was becoming desperate.
    However, summoning all my energy, I made a third frantic attempt but the result
    was the same. The torture of suppressed breathing was getting unendurable, my
    brain was reeling and I felt myself sinking. At that moment, when my situation
    seemed absolutely hopeless, I experienced one of those flashes of light and the
    structure above me appeared before my vision. I either discerned or guessed that
    there was a little space between the surface of the water and the boards resting on
    the beams and, with consciousness nearly gone, I floated up, pressed my mouth
    close to the planks and managed to inhale a little air, unfortunately mingled with a
    spray of water which nearly choked me. Several times I repeated this procedure as
    in a dream until my heart, which was racing at a terrible rate, quieted down, and I
    gained composure. After that I made a number of unsuccessful dives, having
    completely lost the sense of direction, but finally succeeded in getting out of the
    trap when my friends had already given me up and were fishing for my body. That
    bathing season was spoiled for me through recklessness but I soon forgot the lesson
    and only two years later I fell into a worse predicament.
    There was a large flour mill with a dam across the river near the city where I was
    studying at the time. As a rule the height of the water was only two or three inches
    above the dam and to swim to it was a sport not very dangerous in which I often
    indulged. One day I went alone to the river to enjoy
    9.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    myself as usual. When I was a short distance from the masonry, however, I was
    horrified to observe that the water had risen and was carrying me along swiftly. I
    tried to get away but it was too late. Luckily, though, I saved myself from being
    swept over by taking hold of the wall with both hands. The pressure against my
    chest was great and I was barely able to keep my head above the surface. Not a soul
    was in sight and my voice was lost in the roar of the fall. Slowly and gradually I
    became exhausted and unable to withstand the strain longer. Just as I was about to
    let go, to be dashed against the rocks below, I saw in a flash of light a familiar
    diagram illustrating the hydraulic principle that the pressure of a fluid in motion is
    proportionate to the area exposed and automatically I turned on my left side. As if
    by magic, the pressure was reduced and I found it comparatively easy in that
    position to resist the force of the stream. But the danger still confronted me. I knew
    that sooner or later I would be carried down, as it was not possible for any help to
    reach me in time, even if I had attracted attention. I am ambidextrous now, but then
    I was left-handed and had comparatively little strength in my right arm. For this
    reason I did not dare to turn on the other side to rest and nothing remained but to
    slowly push my body along the dam. I had to get away from the mill towards which
    my face was turned, as the current there was much swifter and deeper. It was a long
    and painful ordeal and I came near to failing at its very end, for I was confronted
    with a depression in the masonry. I managed to get over with the last ounce of my
    strength and fell in a swoon when I reached the bank, where I was found. I had torn
    virtually all the skin from my left side and it took several weeks before the fever
    had subsided and I was well. These are only two of many instanced, but they may
    be sufficient to show that had it not been for the inventor’s instinct, I would not
    have lived to tell the tale.
    Interested people have often asked me how and when I began to invent. This I can
    only answer from my present recollection in the light of which, the first attempt I
    recall was rather ambitious for it involved the invention of an apparatus and a
    method. In the former I was anticipated, but the later was original. It happened in
    this way. One of my playmates had come into the possession of a hook and fishing
    tackle which created quite an excitement in the village, and the next morning all
    started out to catch frogs. I was left alone and deserted owing to a quarrel with this
    boy. I had never seen a real hook and pictured it as something wonderful, endowed
    with peculiar qualities, and was despairing not to be one of the party. Urged by
    necessity, I somehow got hold of a piece of soft iron wire, hammered the end to a
    sharp point between two stones, bent it into shape, and fastened it to a strong string.
    I then cut a rod, gathered some bait, and went down to the brook where there were
    frogs in abundance. But I could not catch any and was almost discouraged when it
    occurred to me dangle the empty hook in front of a frog sitting on a stump. At first
    he collapsed but by and by his eyes bulged out and became bloodshot, he swelled to
    twice his normal size and made a vicious snap at the hook. Immediately I pulled
    him up. I tried the same thing again and again and the method proved infallible.
    When my comrades, who in spite of their fine outfit had caught nothing, came to
    me, they were green with envy. For a long time I kept my secret and enjoyed the
    monopoly but finally yielded to the spirit of Christmas. Every boy could then do the
    same and the following summer brought disaster to the frogs.
    In my next attempt, I seem to have acted under the first instinctive impulse which
    later dominated me, — to harness the energies of nature to the service of man. I did
    this through the medium of May bugs, or June bugs as they are called in America,
    which were a veritable pest in that country and sometimes broke the branches of
    trees by the sheer weight of their bodies. The
    10.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    bushes were black with them. I would attach as many as four of them to a cross-piece,
    rotably arranged on a thin spindle, and transmit the motion of the same to a
    large disc and so derive considerable ‘power.’ These creatures were remarkably
    efficient, for once they were started, they had no sense to stop and continued
    whirling for hours and hours and the hotter it was, the harder they worked. All went
    well until a strange boy came to the place. He was the son of a retired officer in the
    Austrian army. That urchin ate May-bugs alive and enjoyed them as though they
    were the finest blue-point oysters. That disgusting sight terminated my endeavours
    in this promising field and I have never since been able to touch a May-bug or any
    other insect for that matter.
    After that, I believe, I undertook to take apart and assemble the clocks of my
    grandfather. In the former operation I was always successful, but often failed in the
    latter. So it came that he brought my work to a sudden halt in a manner not too
    delicate and it took thirty years before I tackled another clockwork again.
    Shortly thereafter, I went into the manufacture of a kind of pop-gun which
    comprised a hollow tube, a piston, and two plugs of hemp. When firing the gun, the
    piston was pressed against the stomach and the tube was pushed back quickly with
    both hands. the air between the plugs was compressed and raised to a high
    temperature and one of them was expelled with a loud report. The art consisted in
    selecting a tube of the proper taper from the hollow stalks which were found in our
    garden. I did very well with that gun, but my activities interfered with the window
    panes in our house and met with painful discouragement.
    If I remember rightly, I then took to carving swords from pieces of furniture which I
    could conveniently obtain. At that time I was under the sway of the Serbian national
    poetry and full of admiration for the feats of the heroes. I used to spend hours in
    mowing down my enemies in the form of corn-stalks which ruined the crops and
    netted me several spankings from my mother. Moreover, these were not of the
    formal kind but the genuine article.
    I had all this and more behind me before I was six years old and had passed through
    one year of elementary school in the village of Smiljan where my family lived. At
    this juncture we moved to the little city of Gospic nearby. This change of residence
    was like a calamity to me. It almost broke my heart to part from our pigeons,
    chickens and sheep, and our magnificent flock of geese which used to rise to the
    clouds in the morning and return from the feeding grounds at sundown in battle
    formation, so perfect that it would have put a squadron of the best aviators of the
    present day to shame. In our new house I was but a prisoner, watching the strange
    people I saw through my window blinds. My bashfulness was such that I would
    rather have faced a roaring lion than one of the city dudes who strolled about. But
    my hardest trial came on Sunday when I had to dress up and attend the service.
    There I met with an accident, the mere thought of which made my blood curdle like
    sour milk for years afterwards. It was my second adventure in a church. Not long
    before, I was entombed for a night in an old chapel on an inaccessible mountain
    which was visited only once a year. It was an awful experience, but this one was
    worse.
    There was a wealthy lady in town, a good but pompous woman, who used to come
    to the church gorgeously painted up and attired with an enormous train and
    attendants. One Sunday I had just finished ringing the bell in the belfry and rushed
    downstairs, when this grand dame was sweeping out and I jumped on her train. It
    tore off with a ripping noise which sounded like a salvo of musketry
    11.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    fired by raw recruits. My father was livid with rage. He gave me a gentle slap on the
    cheek, the only corporal punishment he ever administered to me, but I almost feel it
    now. The embarrassment and confusion that followed are indescribably. I was
    practically ostracised until something else happened which redeemed me in the
    estimation of the community.
    An enterprising young merchant had organised a fire department. A new fire engine
    was purchased, uniforms provided and the men drilled for service and parade. The
    engine was beautifully painted red and black. One afternoon, the official trial was
    prepared for and the machine was transported to the river. The entire population
    turned out to witness the great spectacle. When all the speeches and ceremonies
    were concluded, the command was given to pump, but not a drop of water came
    from the nozzle. The professors and experts tried in vain to locate the trouble. The
    fizzle was complete when I arrived at the scene. My knowledge of of the
    mechanism was nil and I knew next to nothing of air pressure, but instinctively I felt
    for the suction hose in the water and found that it had collapsed. When I waded in
    the river and opened it up, the water rushed forth and not a few Sunday clothes were
    spoiled. Archimedes running naked through the streets of Syracuse and shouting
    Eureka at the top of his voice did not make a greater impression than myself. I was
    carried on the shoulders and was hero of the day.
    Upon settling in the city I began a four years course in the so-called Normal School
    preparatory to my studies at the College or Real-Gymnasium. During this period my
    boyish efforts and exploits as well as troubles, continued.
    Among other things, I attained the unique distinction of champion crow catcher in
    the country. My method of procedure was extremely simple. I would go into the
    forest, hide in the bushes, and imitate the call of the birds. Usually I would get
    several answers and in a short while a crow would flutter down into the shrubbery
    near me. After that, all I needed to do was to throw a piece of cardboard to detract
    its attention, jump up and grab it before it could extricate itself from the
    undergrowth. In this way I would capture as many as I desired. But on one occasion
    something occurred which made me respect them. I had caught a fine pair of birds
    and was returning home with a friend. When we left the forest, thousands of crows
    had gathered making a frightful racket. In a few minutes they rose in pursuit and
    soon enveloped us. The fun lasted until all of a sudden I received a blow on the
    back of my head which knocked me down. Then they attacked me viciously. I was
    compelled to release the two birds and was glad to join my friend who had taken
    refuge in a cave.
    In the school room there were a few mechanical models which interested me and
    turned my attention to water turbines. I constructed many of these and found great
    pleasure in operating them. How extraordinary was my life an incident may
    illustrate. My uncle had no use for this kind of pastime and more than once rebuked
    me. I was fascinated by a description of Niagara Falls I had perused, and pictured in
    my imagination a big wheel run by the falls. I told my uncle that I would go to
    America and carry out this scheme. Thirty years later I was my ideas carried out at
    Niagara and marvelled at the unfathomable mystery of the mind.
    I made all kinds of other contrivances and contraptions but among those, the
    arbalests I produced were the best. My arrows, when short, disappeared from sight
    and at close range traversed a plank of pine one inch thick. Through the continuous
    tightening of the bows I developed a skin on my stomach much like that of a
    crocodile and I am often wondering whether it is due to this exercise
    12.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    that I am able even now to digest cobble-stones! Nor can I pass in silence my
    performances with the sling which would have enabled me to give a stunning
    exhibit at the Hippodrome. And now I will tell of one of my feats with this unique
    implement of war which will strain to the utmost the credulity of the reader.
    I was practising while walking with my uncle along the river. The sun was setting,
    the trout were playful and from time to time one would shoot up into the air, its
    glistening body sharply defined against a projecting rock beyond. Of course any boy
    might have hit a fish under these propitious conditions but I undertook a much more
    difficult task and I foretold to my uncle, to the minutest detail, what I intended
    doing. I was to hurl a stone to meet the fish, press its body against the rock, and cut
    it in two. It was no sooner said than done. My uncle looked at me almost scared out
    of his wits and exclaimed “Vade retra Satanae!” and it was a few days before he
    spoke to me again. Other records, however great, will be eclipsed but I feel that I
    could peacefully rest on my laurels for a thousand years.
    13.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    Chapter 3
    How Tesla Conceived
    The Rotary Magnetic Field
    At the age of ten I entered the Real gymnasium which was a new and fairly well
    equipped institution. In the department of physics were various models of classical
    scientific apparatus, electrical and mechanical. The demonstrations and experiments
    performed from time to time by the instructors fascinated me and were undoubtedly
    a powerful incentive to invention. I was also passionately fond of mathematical
    studies and often won the professor’s praise for rapid calculation. This was due to
    my acquired facility of visualising the figures and performing the operation, not in
    the usual intuitive manner, but as in actual life. Up to a certain degree of complexity
    it was absolutely the same to me whether I wrote the symbols on the board or
    conjured them before my mental vision. But freehand drawing, to which many
    hours of the course were devoted, was an annoyance I could not endure. This was
    rather remarkable as most of the members of the family excelled in it. Perhaps my
    aversion was simply due to the predilection I found in undisturbed thought. Had it
    not been for a few exceptionally stupid boys, who could not do anything at all, my
    record would have been the worst.
    It was a serious handicap as under the then existing educational regime drawing
    being obligatory, this deficiency threatened to spoil my whole career and my father
    had considerable trouble in rail-roading me from one class to another.
    In the second year at that institution I became obsessed with the idea of producing
    continuous motion through steady air pressure. The pump incident, of which I have
    been told, had set afire my youthful imagination and impressed me with the
    boundless possibilities of a vacuum. I grew frantic in my desire to harness this
    inexhaustible energy but for a long time I was groping in the dark. Finally,
    however, my endeavours crystallised in an invention which was to enable me to
    achieve what no other mortal ever attempted. Imagine a cylinder freely rotatable on
    two bearings and partly surrounded by a rectangular trough which fits it perfectly.
    The open side of the trough is enclosed by a partition so that the cylindrical segment
    within the enclosure divides the latter into two compartments entirely separated
    from each other by air-tight sliding joints. One of these compartments being sealed
    and once for all exhausted, the other remaining open, a perpetual rotation of the
    cylinder would result. At least, so I thought.
    A wooden model was constructed and fitted with infinite care and when I applied
    the pump on one side and actual observed that there was a tendency to turning, I
    was delirious with joy. Mechanical flight was the one thing I wanted to accomplish
    although still under the discouraging recollection of a bad fall I sustained by
    jumping with an umbrella from the top of a building. Every day I used to transport
    myself through the air to distant regions but could not understand just how I
    managed to do it. Now I had something concrete, a flying machine with nothing
    more than a rotating shaft, flapping wings, and; – a vacuum of unlimited power!
    From that time on I made my daily aerial excursions in a vehicle of comfort and
    luxury as might have befitted King Solomon. It took years before I understood that
    the atmospheric pressure acted at right angles to the surface of the cylinder and that
    the slight rotary effort I observed was due to a leak! Though this knowledge came
    gradually it gave me a painful shock.
    14.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    I had hardly completed my course at the Real Gymnasium when I was prostrated
    with a dangerous illness or rather, a score of them, and my condition became so
    desperate that I was given up by physicians. During this period I was permitted to
    read constantly, obtaining books from the Public Library which had been neglected
    and entrusted to me for classification of the works and preparation of catalogues.
    One day I was handed a few volumes of new literature unlike anything I had ever
    read before and so captivating as to make me utterly forget me hopeless state. They
    were the earlier works of Mark Twain and to them might have been due the
    miraculous recovery which followed. Twenty-five years later, when I met Mr.
    Clements and we formed a friendship between us, I told him of the experience and
    was amazed to see that great man of laughter burst into tears…
    My studies were continued at the higher Real Gymnasium in Carlstadt, Croatia,
    where one of my aunts resided. She was a distinguished lady, the wife of a Colonel
    who was an old war-horse having participated in many battles, I can never forget
    the three years I passed at their home. No fortress in time of war was under a more
    rigid discipline. I was fed like a canary bird. All the meals were of the highest
    quality and deliciously prepared, but short in quantity by a thousand percent. The
    slices of ham cut by my aunt were like tissue paper. When the Colonel would put
    something substantial on my plate she would snatch it away and say excitedly to
    him; “Be careful. Niko is very delicate.”
    I had a voracious appetite and suffered like Tantalus.
    But I lived in an atmosphere of refinement and artistic taste quite unusual for those
    times and conditions. The land was low and marshy and malaria fever never left me
    while there despite the enormous amounts of qunine I consumed. Occasionally the
    river would rise and drive an army of rats into the buildings, devouring everything,
    even to the bundles of fierce paprika. These pests were to me a welcome diversion. I
    thinned their ranks by all sorts of means, which won me the unenviable distinction
    of rat-catcher in the community. At last, however, my course was completed, the
    misery ended, and I obtained the certificate of maturity which brought me to the
    cross-roads.
    During all those years my parents never wavered in their resolve to make me
    embrace the clergy, the mere thought of which filled me with dread. I had become
    intensely interested in electricity under the stimulating influence of my Professor of
    Physics, who was an ingenious man and often demonstrated the principles by
    apparatus of his own invention. Among these I recall a device in the shape of a
    freely rotatable bulb, with tinfoil coating, which was made to spin rapidly when
    connected to a static machine. It is impossible for me to convey an adequate idea of
    the intensity of feeling I experienced in witnessing his exhibitions of these
    mysterious phenomena. Every impression produced a thousand echoes in my mind.
    I wanted to know more of this wonderful force; I longed for experiment and
    investigation and resigned myself to the inevitable with aching heart. Just as I was
    making ready for the long journey home I received word that my father wished me
    to go on a shooting expedition. It was a strange request as he had been always
    strenuously opposed to this kind of sport. But a few days later I learned that the
    cholera was raging in that district and, taking advantage of an opportunity, I
    returned to Gospic in disregard to my parent’s wishes. It is incredible how
    absolutely ignorant people were as to the causes of this scourge which visited the
    country in intervals of fifteen to twenty years. They thought that the deadly agents
    were transmitted through the air and filled it with pungent odours and smoke. In the
    meantime they drank infested water and died in heaps. I contracted the dreadful
    15.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    disease on the very day of my arrival and although surviving the crisis, I was
    confined to bed for nine months with scarcely any ability to move. My energy was
    completely exhausted and for the second time I found myself at Death’s door.
    In one of the sinking spells which was thought to be the last, my father rushed into
    the room. I still see his pallid face as he tried to cheer me in tones belying his
    assurance. “Perhaps,” I said, “I may get well if you will let me study engineering.”
    “You will go to the best technical institution in the world,” he solemnly replied, and
    I knew that he meant it. A heavy weight was lifted from my mind but the relief
    would have come too late had it not been for a marvellous cure brought through a
    bitter decoction of a peculiar bean. I came to life like Lazarus to the utter
    amazement of everybody.
    My father insisted that I spend a year in healthful physical outdoor exercise to
    which I reluctantly consented. For most of this term I roamed in the mountains,
    loaded with a hunter’s outfit and a bundle of books, and this contact with nature
    made me stronger in body as well as in mind. I thought and planned, and conceived
    many ideas almost as a rule delusive. The vision was clear enough but the
    knowledge of principles was very limited.
    In one of my invention I proposed to convey letters and packages across the seas,
    through a submarine tube, in spherical containers of sufficient strength to resist the
    hydraulic pressure. The pumping plant, intended to force the water through the tube,
    was accurately figured and designed and all other particulars carefully worked out.
    Only one trifling detail, of no consequence, was lightly dismissed. I assumed an
    arbitrary velocity of the water and, what is more, took pleasure in making it high,
    thus arriving at a stupendous performance supported by faultless calculations.
    Subsequent reflections, however, on the resistance of pipes to fluid flow induced me
    to make this invention public property.
    Another one of my projects was to construct a ring around the equator which would,
    of course, float freely and could be arrested in its spinning motion by reactionary
    forces, thus enabling travel at a rate of about one thousand miles an hour,
    impracticable by rail. The reader will smile. The plan was difficult of execution, I
    will admit, but not nearly so bad as that of a well known New York professor, who
    wanted to pump the air from the torrid to temperate zones, entirely forgetful of the
    fact that the Lord had provided a gigantic machine for this purpose.
    Still another scheme, far more important and attractive, was to derive power from
    the rotational energy of terrestrial bodies. I had discovered that objects on the
    earth’s surface owing to the diurnal rotation of the globe, are carried by the same
    alternately in and against the direction of translatory movement. From this results a
    great change in momentum which could be utilised in the simplest imaginable
    manner to furnish motive effort in any habitable region of the world. I cannot find
    words to describe my disappointment when later I realised that I was in the
    predicament of Archimedes, who vainly sought for a fixed point in the universe.
    At the termination of my vacation I was sent to the Poly-Technic School in Gratz,
    Styria (Austria), which my father had chosen as one of the oldest and best reputed
    institutions. That was the moment I had eagerly awaited and I began my studies
    under good auspices and firmly resolved to succeed. My previous training was
    above average, due to my father’s teaching and opportunities afforded. I had
    acquired the knowledge of a number of languages and waded through the books of
    several libraries, picking up information more or
    16.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    less useful. Then again, for the first time, I could choose my subjects as I liked, and
    free-hand drawing was to bother me no more.
    I had made up my mind to give my parents a surprise, and during the whole first
    year I regularly started my work at three o’clock in the morning and continued until
    eleven at night, no Sundays or holidays excepted. As most of my fellow-students
    took things easily, naturally I eclipsed all records. In the course of the year I passed
    through nine exams and the professors thought I deserved more than the highest
    qualifications. Armed with their flattering certificated, I went home for a short rest,
    expecting triumph, and was mortified when my father made light of these hard-won
    honours.
    That almost killed my ambition; but later, after he had died, I was pained to find a
    package of letters which the professors had written to him to the effect that unless
    he took me away from the Institution I would be killed through overwork.
    Thereafter I devoted myself chiefly to physics, mechanics and mathematical studies,
    spending the hours of leisure in the libraries.
    I had a veritable mania for finishing whatever I began, which often got me into
    difficulties. On one occasion I started to read the works of Voltaire, when I learned,
    to my dismay that there were close to one hundred large volumes in small print
    which that monster had written while drinking seventy-two cups of black coffee per
    diem. It had to be done, but when I laid aside that last book I was very glad, and
    said, “Never more!”
    My first year’s showing had won me the appreciation and friendship of several
    professors. Among these, Professor Rogner, who was teaching arithmetical subjects
    and geometry; Professor Poeschl, who held the chair of theoretical and experimental
    physics, and Dr. Alle, who taught integral calculus and specialised in differential
    equations. This scientist was the most brilliant lecturer to whom I ever listened. He
    took a special interest in my progress and would frequently remain for an hour or
    two in the lecture room, giving me problems to solve, in which I delighted. To him I
    explained a flying machine I had conceived, not an illusory invention, but one based
    on sound, scientific principles, which has become realisable through my turbine and
    will soon be given to the world. Both Professors Rogner and Poeschl were curious
    men. The former had peculiar ways of expressing himself and whenever he did so,
    there was a riot, followed by a long embarrassing pause. Professor Poeschl was a
    methodical and thoroughly grounded German. He had enormous feet, and hands
    like the paws of a bear, but all of his experiments were skilfully performed with
    clock-like precision and without a miss. It was in the second year of my studies that
    we received a Gramoe Dyname from Paris, having the horseshoe form of a
    laminated field magnet, and a wire wound armature with a commutator. It was
    connected up and various effects of the currents were shown. While Professor
    Poeschl was making demonstrations, running the machine was a motor, the brushes
    gave trouble, sparking badly, and I observed that it might be possible to operate a
    motor without these appliances. But he declared that it could not be done and did
    me the honour of delivering a lecture on the subject, at the conclusion he remarked,
    “Mr. Tesla may accomplish great things, but he certainly will never do this. It
    would be equivalent to converting a steadily pulling force, like that of gravity into a
    rotary effort. It is a perpetual motion scheme, an impossible idea.” But instinct is
    something which transcends knowledge. We have, undoubtedly, certain finer fibres
    that enable us to perceive truths when logical deduction, or any other wilful effort
    of the brain, is futile.
    For a time I wavered, impressed by the professor’s authority, but soon
    17.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    became convinced I was right and undertook the task with all the fire and boundless
    confidence of my youth. I started by first picturing in my mind a direct-current
    machine, running it and following the changing flow of the currents in the armature.
    Then I would imagine an alternator and investigate the progresses taking place in a
    similar manner. Next I would visualise systems comprising motors and generators
    and operate them in various ways.
    The images I saw were to me perfectly real and tangible. All my remaining term in
    Gratz was passed in intense but fruitless efforts of this kind, and I almost came to
    the conclusion that the problem was insolvable.
    In 1880 I went to Prague, Bohemia, carrying out my father’s wish to complete my
    education at the University there. It was in that city that I made a decided advance,
    which consisted in detaching the commutator from the machine and studying the
    phenomena in this new aspect, but still without result. In the year following there
    was a sudden change in my views of life.
    I realised that my parents had been making too great sacrifices on my account and
    resolved to relieve them of the burden. The wave of the American telephone had
    just reached the European continent and the system was to be installed in Budapest,
    Hungary. It appeared an ideal opportunity, all the more as a friend of our family
    was at the head of the enterprise.
    It was here that I suffered the complete breakdown of the nerves to which I have
    referred. What I experienced during the period of the illness surpasses all belief. My
    sight and hearing were always extraordinary. I could clearly discern objects in the
    distance when others saw no trace of them. Several times in my boyhood I saved the
    houses of our neighbours from fire by hearing the faint crackling sounds which did
    not disturb their sleep, and calling for help. In 1899, when I was past forty and
    carrying on my experiments in Colorado, I could hear very distinctly thunderclaps
    at a distance of 550 miles. My ear was thus over thirteen times more sensitive, yet at
    that time I was, so to speak, stone deaf in comparison with the acuteness of my
    hearing while under the nervous strain.
    In Budapest I could hear the ticking of a watch with three rooms between me and
    the time-piece. A fly alighting on a table in the room would cause a dull thud in my
    ear. A carriage passing at a distance of a few miles fairly shook my whole body.
    The whistle of a locomotive twenty or thirty miles away made the bench or chair on
    which I sat, vibrate so strongly that the pain was unbearable. The ground under my
    feet trembled continuously. I had to support my bed on rubber cushions to get any
    rest at all. The roaring noises from near and far often produced the effect of spoken
    words which would have frightened me had I not been able to resolve them into
    their accumulated components. The sun rays, when periodically intercepted, would
    cause blows of such force on my brain that they would stun me. I had to summon all
    my will power to pass under a bridge or other structure, as I experienced the
    crushing pressure on the skull. In the dark I had the sense of a bat, and could detect
    the presence of an object at a distance of twelve feet by a peculiar creepy sensation
    on the forehead. My pulse varied from a few to two hundred and sixty beats and all
    the tissues of my body with twitchings and tremors, which was perhaps hardest to
    bear. A renowned physician who have me daily large doses of Bromide of
    Potassium, pronounced my malady unique and incurable.
    It is my eternal regret that I was not under the observation of experts in physiology
    and psychology at that time. I clung desperately to life, but
    18.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    never expected to recover. Can anyone believe that so hopeless a physical wreck
    could ever be transformed into a man of astonishing strength and tenacity; able to
    work thirty-eight years almost without a day’s interruption, and find himself still
    strong and fresh in body and mind? Such is my case. A powerful desire to live and
    to continue the work and the assistance of a devoted friend, an athlete,
    accomplished the wonder. My health returned and with it the vigour of mind.
    In attacking the problem again, I almost regretted that the struggle was soon to end.
    I had so much energy to spare. When I understood the task, it was not with a resolve
    such as men often make. With me it was a sacred vow, a question of life and death.
    I knew that I would perish if I failed. Now I felt that the battle was won. Back in the
    deep recesses of the brain was the solution, but I could net yet give it outward
    expression.
    One afternoon, which is ever present in my recollection, I was enjoying a walk with
    my friend in the City Park and reciting poetry. At that age, I knew entire books by
    heart, word for word. One of these was Goethe’s “Faust.” The sun was just setting
    and reminded me of the glorious passage, “Sie ruckt und weicht, der Tag ist
    uberlebt, Dort eilt sie hin und fordert neues Leben. Oh, daß kein Flugel mich vom
    Boden hebt Ihr nach und immer nach zu streben! Ein schöner Traum indessen sie
    entweicht, Ach, au des Geistes Flügein wird so leicht Kein korperlicher Flugel sich
    gesellen!” As I uttered these inspiring words the idea came like a flash of lightening
    and in an instant the truth was revealed. I drew with a stick on the sand, the diagram
    shown six years later in my address before the American Institute of Electrical
    Engineers, and my companion understood them perfectly. The images I saw were
    wonderfully sharp and clear and had the solidity of metal and stone, so much so that
    I told him, “See my motor here; watch me reverse it.” I cannot begin to describe my
    emotions. Pygmalion seeing his statue come to life could not have been more
    deeply moved. A thousand secrets of nature which I might have stumbled upon
    accidentally, I would have given for that one which I had wrested from her against
    all odds and at the peril of my existence…
    19.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    Chapter 4
    The Discovery of the
    Tesla Coil and Transformer
    (The Basic Part of Every Radio and T.V.)
    For a while I gave myself up entirely to the intense enjoyment of picturing
    machines and devising new forms. It was a mental state of happiness about as
    complete as I have ever known in life. Ideas came in an uninterrupted stream and
    the only difficulty I had was to hold them fast. The pieces of apparatus I conceived
    were to me absolutely real and tangible in every detail, even to the minutest marks
    and signs of wear. I delighted in imagining the motors constantly running, for in this
    way they presented to the mind’s eye a fascinating sight. When natural inclination
    develops into a passionate desire, one advances towards his goal in seven-league
    boots. In less than two months I evolved virtually all the types of motors and
    modifications of the system which are now identified with my name, and which are
    used under many other names all over the world. It was, perhaps, providential that
    the necessities of existence commanded a temporary halt to this consuming activity
    of the mind.
    I came to Budapest prompted by a premature report concerning the telephone
    enterprise and, as irony of fate willed it, I had to accept a position as draughtsman in
    the Central Telegraph Office of the Hungarian Government at a salary which I deem
    it my privilege not to disclose. Fortunately, I soon won the interest of the Inspector-in-
    Chief and was thereafter employed on calculations, designs and estimates in
    connection with new installations, until the Telephone exchange started, when I
    took charge of the same. The knowledge and practical experience I gained in the
    course of this work, was most valuable and the employment gave me ample
    opportunities for the exercise of my inventive faculties. I made several
    improvements in the Central Station apparatus and perfected a telephone repeater or
    amplifier which was never patented or publicly described but would be creditable to
    me even today. In recognition of my efficient assistance the organiser of the
    undertaking, Mr. Puskas, upon disposing of his business in Budapest, offered me a
    position in Paris which I gladly accepted.
    I never can forget the deep impression that magic city produced on my mind. For
    several days after my arrival, I roamed through the streets in utter bewilderment of
    the new spectacle. The attractions were many and irresistible, but, alas, the income
    was spent as soon as received. When Mr. Puskas asked me how I was getting along
    in the new sphere, I described the situation accurately in the statement that “The last
    twenty-nine days of the month are the toughest.” I led a rather strenuous life in what
    would now be termed “Rooseveltian fashion.” Every morning, regardless of the
    weather, I would go from the Boulevard St. Marcel, where I resided, to a bathing
    house on the Seine; plunge into the water, loop the circuit twenty-seven times and
    then walk an hour to reach Ivry, where the Company’s factory was located. There I
    would have a wood-chopper’s breakfast at half-past seven o’clock and then eagerly
    await the lunch hour, in the meanwhile cracking hard nuts for the Manager of the
    Works, Mr. Charles Batchellor, who was an intimate friend and assistant of Edison.
    Here I was thrown in contact with a few Americans who fairly fell in love with my
    because of my proficiency in Billiards! To these men I explained my invention and
    one of them, Mr. D. Cunningham, foreman of
    20.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    the Mechanical Department, offered to form a stock company. The proposal seemed
    to me comical in the extreme. I did not have the faintest conception of what he
    meant, except that it was an American way of doing things. Nothing came of it,
    however, and during the next few months I had to travel from one place to another
    in France and Germany to cure the ills of the power plants.
    On my return to Paris, I submitted to one of the administrators of the Company, Mr.
    Rau, a plan for improving their dynamos and was given an opportunity. My success
    was complete and the delighted directors accorded me the privilege of developing
    automatic regulators which were much desired. Shortly after, there was some
    trouble with the lighting plant which had been installed at the new railroad station in
    Straßburg, Alsace. The wiring was defective and on the occasion of the opening
    ceremonies, a large part of a wall was blown out through a short-circiut, right in the
    presence of old Emperor William I. The German Government refused to take the
    plant and the French Company was facing a serious loss. On account of my
    knowledge of the German language and past experience, I was entrusted with the
    difficult task of straightening out matters and early in 1883, I went to Straßburg on
    that mission.
    Some of the incidents in that city have left an indelible record on my memory. By a
    curious coincidence, a number of the men who subsequently achieve fame, lived
    there about that time. In later life I used to say, “There were bacteria of greatness in
    that old town.” Others caught the disease, but I escaped!” The practical work,
    correspondence, and conferences with officials kept me preoccupied day and night,
    but as soon as I was able to manage, I undertook the construction of a simple motor
    in a mechanical shop opposite the rail-road station, having brought with me from
    Paris some material for that purpose. The consummation of the experiment was,
    however, delayed until the summer of that year, when I finally had the satisfaction
    of seeing the rotation effected by alternating currents of different phase, and without
    sliding contacts or commutator, as I had conceived a year before. It was an exquisite
    pleasure but not to compare with the delirium of joy following the first revelation.
    Among my new friends was the former Mayor of the city, Mr. Sauzin, whom I had
    already, in a measure, acquainted with this and other inventions of mine and whose
    support I endeavoured to enlist. He was sincerely devoted to me and put my project
    before several wealthy persons, but to my mortification, found no response. He
    wanted to help me in every possible way and the approach of the first of July, 1917,
    happens to remind me of a form of “assistance” I received from that charming man,
    which was not financial, but none the less appreciated. In 1870, when the Germans
    invaded the country, Mr. Sauzin had buried a good sized allotment of St. Estephe of
    1801 and he came to the conclusion that he knew no worthier person than myself, to
    consume that precious beverage. This, I may say, is one of the unforgettable
    incidents to which I have referred. My friend urged me to return to Paris as soon as
    possible and seek support there. This I was anxious to do, but my work and
    negotiations were protracted, owing to all sorts of petty obstacles I encountered, so
    that at times the situation seemed hopeless. Just to give an idea of German
    thoroughness and “efficiency,” I may mention here a rather funny experience.
    An incandescent lamp of 16 c.p. was to be placed in a hallway, and upon selected
    the proper location, I ordered the “monteur” to run the wires. After working for a
    while, he concluded that the engineer had to be consulted and this was done. The
    latter made several objections but ultimately agreed that the lamp should be placed
    two inches from the spot I had assigned, whereupon the work proceeded. Then the
    engineer became worried and told me that Inspector Averdeck should be notified.
    That important person was called,
    21.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    he investigated, debated, and decided that the lamp should be shifted back two
    inches, which was the placed I had marked! It was not long, however, before
    Averdeck got cold feet himself and advised me that he had informed Ober-Inspector
    Hieronimus of the matter and that I should await his decision. It was several days
    before the Ober-Inspector was able to free himself of other pressing duties, but at
    last he arrived and a two hour debate followed, when he decided to move the lamp
    two inches further. My hopes that this was the final act, were shattered when the
    Ober-Inspector returned and said to me, “Regierungsrath Funke is particular that I
    would not dare to give an order for placing this lamp without his explicit approval.”
    Accordingly, arrangements for a visit from that great man were made. We started
    cleaning up and polishing early in the morning, and when Funke came with his
    retinue he was ceremoniously received. After two hours of deliberation, he
    suddenly exclaimed, “I must be going!,” and pointing to a place on the ceiling, he
    ordered me to put the lamp there. It was the exact spot which I had originally
    chosen! So it went day after day with variations, but I was determined to achieve, at
    whatever cost, and in the end my efforts were rewarded.
    By the spring of 1884, all the differences were adjusted, the plant formally
    accepted, and I returned to Paris with pleasing anticipation. One of the
    administrators had promised me a liberal compensation in case I succeeded, as well
    as a fair consideration of the improvements I had made to their dynamos and I
    hoped to realise a substantial sum. There were three administrators, whom I shall
    designate as A, B, and C for convenience. When I called on A, he told me that B
    had the say. This gentleman thought that only C could decide, and the latter was
    quite sure that A alone had the power to act. After several laps of this circulus
    viciousus, it dawned upon me that my reward was a castle in Spain.
    The utter failure of my attempts to raise capital for development was another
    disappointment, and when Mr. Bachelor pressed me to go to America with a view
    of redesigning the Edison machines, I determined to try my fortunes in the Land of
    Golden Promise. But the chance was nearly missed. I liquefied my modest assets,
    secured accommodations and found myself at the railroad station as the train was
    pulling out. At that moment, I discovered that my money and tickets were gone.
    What to do was the question. Hercules had plenty of time to deliberate, but I had to
    decide while running alongside the train with opposite feeling surging in my brain
    like condenser oscillations. Resolve, helped by dexterity, won out in the nick of
    time and upon passing through the usual experience, as trivial and unpleasant, I
    managed to embark for New York with the remnants of my belongings, some
    poems and articles I had written, and a package of calculations relating to solutions
    of an unsolvable integral and my flying machine. During the voyage I sat most of
    the time at the stern of the ship watching for an opportunity to save somebody from
    a watery grave, without the slightest thought of danger. Later, when I had absorbed
    some of the practical American sense, I shivered at the recollection and marvelled at
    my former folly. The meeting with Edison was a memorable event in my life. I was
    amazed at this wonderful man who, without early advantages and scientific training,
    had accomplished so much. I had studied a dozen languages, delved in literature
    and art, and had spent my best years in libraries reading all sorts of stuff that fell
    into my hands, from Newton’s “Principia” to the novels of Paul de Kock, and felt
    that most of my life had been squandered. But it did not take long before I
    recognised that it was the best thing I could have done. Within a few weeks I had
    won Edison’s confidence, and it came about in this way.
    The S.S. Oregon, the fastest passenger steamer at that time, had both of
    22.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    its lighting machines disabled and its sailing was delayed. As the super-structure
    had been built after their installation, it was impossible to remove them from the
    hold. The predicament was a serious one and Edison was much annoyed. In the
    evening I took the necessary instruments with me and went aboard the vessel where
    I stayed for the night. The dynamos were in bad condition, having several short-circuits
    and breaks, but with the assistance of the crew, I succeeded in putting them
    in good shape. At five o’clock in the morning, when passing along Fifth Avenue on
    my way to the shop, I met Edison with Bachelor and a few others, as they were
    returning home to retire. “Here is our Parisian running around at night,” he said.
    When I told him that I was coming from the Oregon and had repaired both
    machines, he looked at me in silence and walked away without another word. But
    when he had gone some distance I heard him remark, “Bachelor, this is a good
    man.” And from that time on I had full freedom in directing the work. For nearly a
    year my regular hours were from 10:30 A.M. until 5 o’clock the next morning
    without a day’s exception. Edison said to me, “I have had many hard working
    assistants, but you take the cake.” During this period I designed twenty-four
    different types of standard machines with short cores and uniform pattern, which
    replaced the old ones. The Manager had promised me fifty thousand dollars on the
    completion of this task, but it turned out to be a practical joke. This gave me a
    painful shock and I resigned my position.
    Immediately thereafter, some people approached me with the proposal of forming
    an arc light company under my name, to which I agreed. Here finally, was an
    opportunity to develop the motor, but when I broached the subject to my new
    associates they said, “No, we want the arc lamp. We don’t care for this alternating
    current of yours.” In 1886 my system of arc lighting was perfected and adopted for
    factory and municipal lighting, and I was free, but with no other possession than a
    beautifully engraved certificate of stock of hypothetical value. Then followed a
    period of struggle in the new medium for which I was not fitted, but the reward
    came in the end, and in April, 1887, the TESLA Electric Co. was organised,
    providing a laboratory and facilities. The motors I built there were exactly as I had
    imagined them. I made no attempt to improve the design, but merely reproduced the
    pictures as they appeared to my vision and the operation was always as I expected.
    In the early part of 1888, an arrangement was made with the Westinghouse
    Company for the manufacture of the motors on a large scale. But great difficulties
    had still to be overcome. My system was based on the use of low frequency currents
    and the Westinghouse experts had adopted 133 cycles with the objects of securing
    advantages in transformation. They did not want to depart with their standard forms
    of apparatus and my efforts had to be concentrated upon adapting the motor to these
    conditions. Another necessity was to produce a motor capable of running efficiently
    at this frequency on two wire, which was not an easy accomplishment.
    At the close of 1889, however, my services in Pittsburgh being no longer essential, I
    returned to New York and resumed experimental work in a Laboratory on Grand
    Street, where I began immediately the design of high-frequency machines. The
    problems of construction in this unexplored field were novel and quite peculiar, and
    I encountered many difficulties. I rejected the inductor type, fearing that it might not
    yield perfect sine waves, which were so important to resonant action. Had it not
    been for this, I could have saved myself a great deal of labour. Another
    discouraging feature of the high-frequency alternator seemed to be the inconstancy
    of speed which threatened to impose serious limitations to its use. I had already
    noted in my demonstrations before the American Institution of Electrical Engineers,
    that several times
    23.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    the tune was lost, necessitating readjustment, and did not yet foresee what I
    discovered long afterwards, – a means of operating a machine of this kind at a speed
    constant to such a degree as not to vary more than a small fraction of one revolution
    between the extremes of load. From many other considerations, it appeared
    desirable to invent a simpler device for the production of electric oscillations.
    In 1856, Lord Kelvin had exposed the theory of the condenser discharge, but no
    practical application of that important knowledge was made. I saw the possibilities
    and undertook the development of induction apparatus on this principle. My
    progress was so rapid as to enable me to exhibit at my lecture in 1891, a coil giving
    sparks of five inches. On that occasion I frankly told the engineers of a defect
    involved in the transformation by the new method, namely, the loss in the spark
    gap. Subsequent investigation showed that no matter what medium is employed,
    –be it air, hydrogen, mercury vapour, oil, or a stream of electrons, the efficiency is
    the same. It is a law very much like the governing of the conversion of mechanical
    energy. We may drop a weight from a certain height vertically down, or carry it to
    the lower level along any devious path; it is immaterial insofar as the amount of
    work is concerned. Fortunately however, this drawback is not fatal, as by proper
    proportioning of the resonant, circuits of an efficiency of 85 percent is attainable.
    Since my early announcement of the invention, it has come into universal use and
    wrought a revolution in many departments, but a still greater future awaits it.
    When in 1900 I obtained powerful discharges of 1,000 feet and flashed a current
    around the globe, I was reminded of the first tiny spark I observed in my Grand
    Street laboratory and was thrilled by sensations akin to those I felt when I
    discovered the rotating magnetic field.
    24.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    Chapter 5
    As I review the events of my past life I realise how subtle are the influences that
    shape our destinies. An incident of my youth may serve to illustrate. One winter’s
    day I managed to climb a steep mountain, in company with other boys. The snow
    was quite deep and a warm southerly wind made it just suitable for our purpose. We
    amused ourselves by throwing balls which would roll down a certain distance,
    gathering more or less snow, and we tried to out-do one another in this sport.
    Suddenly a ball was seen to go beyond the limit, swelling to enormous proportions
    until it became as big as a house and plunged thundering into the valley below with
    a force that made the ground tremble. I looked on spell-bound incapable of
    understanding what had happened. For weeks afterward the picture of the avalanche
    was before my eyes and I wondered how anything so small could grow to such an
    immense size.
    Ever since that time the magnification of feeble actions fascinated me, and when,
    years later, I took up the experimental study of mechanical and electrical resonance,
    I was keenly interested from the very start. Possibly, had it not been for that early
    powerful impression I might not have followed up the little spark I obtained with
    my coil and never developed my best invention, the true history of which I will tell.
    Many technical men, very able in their special departments, but dominated by a
    pedantic spirit and near-sighted, have asserted that excepting the induction motor, I
    have given the world little of practical use. This is a grievous mistake. A new idea
    must not be judged by its immediate results. My alternating system of power
    transmission came at a psychological moment, as a long sought answer to pressing
    industrial questions, and although considerable resistance had to be overcome and
    opposing interests reconciled, as usual, the commercial introduction could not be
    long delayed. Now, compare this situation with that confronting my turbines, for
    example. One should think that so simple and beautiful an invention, possessing
    many features of an ideal motor, should be adopted at once and, undoubtedly, it
    would under similar conditions. But the prospective effect of the rotating field was
    not to render worthless existing machinery; on the contrary, it was to give it
    additional value. The system lent itself to new enterprise as well as to improvement
    of the old. My turbine is an advance of a character entirely different. It is a radical
    departure in the sense that its success would mean the abandonment of the
    antiquated types of prime movers on which billions of dollars have been spent.
    Under such circumstances, the progress must needs be slow and perhaps the
    greatest impediment is encountered in the prejudicial opinions created in the minds
    of experts by organised opposition.
    Only the other day, I had a disheartening experience when I met my friend and
    former assistant, Charles F. Scott, now professor of Electric Engineering at Yale. I
    had not seen him for a long time and was glad to have an opportunity for a little
    chat at my office. Our conversation, naturally enough, drifted on my turbine and I
    became heated to a high degree. “Scott,” I exclaimed, carried away by the vision of
    a glorious future, “My turbine will scrap all the heat engines in the world.” Scott
    stroked his chin and looked away thoughtfully, as though making a mental
    calculation. “That will make quite a pile of scrap,” he said, and left without another
    word!
    These and other inventions of mine, however, were nothing more than steps
    25.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    forward in a certain directions. In evolving them, I simply followed the inborn
    instinct to improve the present devices without any special thought of our far more
    imperative necessities. The “Magnifying Transmitter” was the product of labours
    extending through years, having for their chief object, the solution of problems
    which are infinitely more important to mankind than mere industrial development.
    If my memory serves me right, it was in November, 1890, that I performed a
    laboratory experiment which was one of the most extraordinary and spectacular
    ever recorded in the annal of Science. In investigating the behaviour of high
    frequency currents, I had satisfied myself that an electric field of sufficient intensity
    could be produced in a room to light up electrodeless vacuum tubes. Accordingly, a
    transformer was built to test the theory and the first trial proved a marvellous
    success. It is difficult to appreciate what those strange phenomena meant at the
    time. We crave for new sensations, but soon become indifferent to them. The
    wonders of yesterday are today common occurrences. When my tubes were first
    publicly exhibited, they were viewed with amazement impossible to describe. From
    all parts of the world, I received urgent invitations and numerous honours and other
    flattering inducements were offered to me, which I declined. But in 1892 the
    demand became irresistible and I went to London where I delivered a lecture before
    the institution of Electrical Engineers.
    It has been my intention to leave immediately for Paris in compliance with a similar
    obligation, but Sir James Dewar insisted on my appearing before the Royal
    Institution. I was a man of firm resolve, but succumbed easily to the forceful
    arguments of the great Scotchman. He pushed me into a chair and poured out half a
    glass of a wonderful brown fluid which sparkled in all sorts of iridescent colours
    and tasted like nectar. “Now,” said he, “you are sitting in Faraday’s chair and you
    are enjoying whiskey he used to drink.” (Which did not interest me very much, as I
    had altered my opinion concerning strong drink). The next evening I have a
    demonstration before the Royal Institution, at the termination of which, Lord
    Rayleigh addressed the audience and his generous words gave me the first start in
    these endeavours. I fled from London and later from Paris, to escape favours
    showered upon me, and journeyed to my home, where I passed through a most
    painful ordeal and illness.
    Upon regaining my health, I began to formulate plans for the resumption of work in
    America. Up to that time I never realised that I possessed any particular gift of
    discovery, but Lord Rayleigh, whom I always considered as an ideal man of
    science, had said so and if that was the case, I felt that I should concentrate on some
    big idea.
    At this time, as at many other times in the past, my thoughts turned towards my
    Mother’s teaching. The gift of mental power comes from God, Divine Being, and if
    we concentrate our minds on that truth, we become in tune with this great power.
    My Mother had taught me to seek all truth in the Bible; therefore I devoted the next
    few months to the study of this work.
    One day, as I was roaming the mountains, I sought shelter from an approaching
    storm. The sky became overhung with heavy clouds, but somehow the rain was
    delayed until, all of a sudden, there was a lightening flash and a few moments after,
    a deluge. This observation set me thinking. It was manifest that the two phenomena
    were closely related, as cause and effect, and a little reflection led me to the
    conclusion that the electrical energy involved in the precipitation of the water was
    inconsiderable, the function of the lightening being much like that of a sensitive
    trigger. Here was a stupendous possibility of
    26.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    achievement. If we could produce electric effects of the required quality, this whole
    planet and the conditions of existence on it could be transformed. The sun raises the
    water of the oceans and winds drive it to distant regions where it remains in a state
    of most delicate balance. If it were in our power to upset it when and wherever
    desired, this might life sustaining stream could be at will controlled. We could
    irrigate arid deserts, create lakes and rivers, and provide motive power in unlimited
    amounts. This would be the most efficient way of harnessing the sun to the uses of
    man. The consummation depended on our ability to develop electric forces of the
    order of those in nature.
    It seemed a hopeless undertaking, but I made up my mind to try it and immediately
    on my return to the United States in the summer of 1892, after a short visit to my
    friends in Watford, England; work was begun which was to me all the more
    attractive, because a means of the same kind was necessary for the successful
    transmission of energy without wires.
    At this time I made a further careful study of the Bible, and discovered the key in
    Revelation. The first gratifying result was obtained in the spring of the succeeding
    year, when I reaching a tension of about 100,000,000 volts — one hundred million
    volts — with my conical coil, which I figured was the voltage of a flash of
    lightening. Steady progress was made until the destruction of my laboratory by fire,
    in 1895, as may be judged from an article by T.C. Martin which appeared in the
    April number of the Century Magazine. This calamity set me back in many ways
    and most of that year had to be devoted to planning and reconstruction. However, as
    soon as circumstances permitted, I returned to the task.
    Although I knew that higher electric-motive forces were attainable with apparatus
    of larger dimensions, I had an instinctive perception that the object could be
    accomplished by the proper design of a comparatively small and compact
    transformer. In carrying on tests with a secondary in the form of flat spiral, as
    illustrated in my patents, the absence of streamers surprised me, and it was not long
    before I discovered that this was due to the position of the turns and their mutual
    action. Profiting from this observation, I resorted to the use of a high tension
    conductor with turns of considerable diameter, sufficiently separated to keep down
    the distributed capacity, while at the same time preventing undue accumulation of
    the charge at any point. The application of this principle enabled me to produce
    pressures of over 100,000,000 volts, which was about the limit obtainable without
    risk of accident. A photograph of my transmitter built in my laboratory at Houston
    Street, was published in the Electrical Review of November, 1898.
    In order to advance further along this line, I had to go into the open, and in the
    spring of 1899, having completed preparations for the erection of a wireless plant, I
    went to Colorado where I remained for more than one year. Here I introduced other
    improvements and refinements which made it possible to generate currents of any
    tension that may be desired. Those who are interested will find some information in
    regard to the experiments I conducted there in my article, “The Problem of
    Increasing Human Energy,” in the Century Magazine of June 1900, to which I have
    referred on a previous occasion.
    I will be quite explicit on the subject of my magnifying transformer so that it will be
    clearly understood. In the first place, it is a resonant transformer, with a secondary
    in which the parts, charged to a high potential, are of considerable area and arranged
    in space along ideal enveloping surfaces of very large radii of curvature, and at
    proper distances from one another, thereby
    27.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    insuring a small electric surface density everywhere, so that no leak can occur even
    if the conductor is bare. It is suitable for any frequency, from a few to many
    thousands of cycles per second, and can be used in the production of currents of
    tremendous volume and moderate pressure, or of smaller amperage and immense
    electromotive force. The maximum electric tension is merely dependent on the
    curvature of the surfaces on which the charged elements are situated and the area of
    the latter. Judging from my past experience there is no limit to the possible voltage
    developed; any amount is practicable. On the other hand, currents of many
    thousands of amperes may be obtained in the antenna. A plant of but very moderate
    dimensions is required for such performances. Theoretically, a terminal of less than
    90 feet in diameter is sufficient to develop an electromotive force of that magnitude,
    while for antenna currents of from 2,000-4,000 amperes at the usual frequencies, it
    need not be larger than 30 feet in diameter. In a more restricted meaning, this
    wireless transmitter is one in which the Hertzwave radiation is an entirely negligible
    quantity as compared with the whole energy, under which condition the damping
    factor is extremely small and an enormous charge is stored in the elevated capacity.
    Such a circuit may then be excited with impulses of any kind, even of low
    frequency and it will yield sinusoidal and continuous oscillations like those of an
    alternator. Taken in the narrowest significance of the term, however, it is a resonant
    transformer which, besides possessing these qualities, is accurately proportioned to
    fit the globe and its electrical constants and properties, by virtue of which design it
    becomes highly efficient and effective in the wireless transmission of energy.
    Distance is then ABSOLUTELY ELIMINATED, THERE BEING NO
    DIMINUATION IN THE INTENSITY of the transmitted impulses. It is even
    possible to make the actions increase with the distance from the plane, according to
    an exact mathematical law. This invention was one of a number comprised in my
    “World System” of wireless transmission which I undertook to commercialise on
    my return to New York in 1900.
    As to the immediate purposes of my enterprise, they were clearly outlined in a
    technical statement of that period from which I quote, “The world system has
    resulted from a combination of several original discoveries made by the inventor in
    the course of long continued research and experimentation. It makes possible not
    only the instantaneous and precise wireless transmission of any kind of signals,
    messages or characters, to all parts of the world, but also the inter-connection of the
    existing telegraph, telephone, and other signal stations without any change in their
    present equipment. By its means, for instance, a telephone subscriber here may call
    up and talk to any other subscriber on the Earth. An inexpensive receiver, not bigger
    than a watch, will enable him to listen anywhere, on land or sea, to a speech
    delivered or music played in some other place, however distant.”
    These examples are cited merely to give an idea of the possibilities of this great
    scientific advance, which annihilates distance and makes that perfect natural
    conductor, the Earth, available for all the innumerable purposes which human
    ingenuity has found for a line-wire. One far-reaching result of this is that any device
    capable of being operated through one or more wires (at a distance obviously
    restricted) can likewise be actuated, without artificial conductors and with the same
    facility and accuracy, at distances to which there are no limits other than those
    imposed by the physical dimensions of the earth. Thus, not only will entirely new
    fields for commercial exploitation be opened up by this ideal method of
    transmission, but the old ones vastly extended. The World System is based on the
    application of the following import and inventions and discoveries:
    1) The Tesla Transformer: This apparatus is in the production of elec-28.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    trical vibrations as revolutionary as gunpowder was in warfare. Currents many
    times stronger than any ever generated in the usual ways and sparks over one
    hundred feet long, have been produced by the inventor with an instrument of this
    kind.
    2) The Magnifying Transmitter: This is Tesla’s best invention, a peculiar
    transformer specially adapted to excite the earth, which is in the transmission of
    electrical energy when the telescope is in astronomical observation. By the use of
    this marvellous device, he has already set up electrical movements of greater
    intensity than those of lightening and passed a current, sufficient to light more than
    two hundred incandescent lamps, around the Earth.
    3) The Tesla Wireless System: This system comprises a number of improvements
    and is the only means known for transmitting economically electrical energy to a
    distance without wires. Careful tests and measurements in connection with an
    experimental station of great activity, erected by the inventor in Colorado, have
    demonstrated that power in any desired amount can be conveyed, clear across the
    Globe if necessary, with a loss not exceeding a few per cent.
    4) The Art of Individualisation: This invention of Tesla is to primitive Tuning, what
    refined language is to unarticulated expression. It makes possible the transmission
    of signals or messages absolutely secret and exclusive both in the active and passive
    aspect, that is, non-interfering as well as non-interferable. Each signal is like an
    individual of unmistakable identity and there is virtually no limit to the number of
    stations or instruments which can be simultaneously operated without the slightest
    mutual disturbance.
    5) The Terrestrial Stationary Waves: This wonderful discovery, popularly
    explained, means that the Earth is responsive to electrical vibrations of definite
    pitch, just as a tuning fork to certain waves of sound. These particular electrical
    vibrations, capable of powerfully exciting the Globe, lend themselves to
    innumerable uses of great importance commercially and in many other respects.
    The “first World System” power plant can be put in operation in nine months. With
    this power plant, it will be practicable to attain electrical activities up to ten million
    horse-power and it is designed to serve for as many technical achievements as are
    possible without due expense. Among these are the following:
    1) The inter-connection of existing telegraph exchanges or offices all over the
    world;
    2) The establishment of a secret and non-interferable government telegraph service;
    3) The inter-connection of all present telephone exchanges or offices around the
    Globe;
    4) The universal distribution of general news by telegraph or telephone, in
    conjunction with the Press;
    5) The establishment of such a “World System” of intelligence transmission for
    exclusive private use;
    6) The inter-connection and operation of all stock tickers of the world;
    7) The establishment of a World system — of musical distribution, etc.;
    8) The universal registration of time by cheap clocks indicating the hour with
    astronomical precision and requiring no attention whatever;
    9) The world transmission of typed or hand-written characters, letters, checks, etc.;
    10) The establishment of a universal marine service enabling the navigators of all
    ships to steer perfectly without compass, to determine the exact location, hour and
    speak; to prevent collisions and disasters, etc.;
    29.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    11) The inauguration of a system of world printing on land and sea;
    12) The world reproduction of photographic pictures and all kinds of drawings or
    records…”
    I also proposed to make demonstration in the wireless transmission of power on a
    small scale, but sufficient to carry conviction. Besides these, I referred to other and
    incomparably more important applications of my discoveries which will be
    disclosed at some future date. A plant was built on Long Island with a tower 187
    feet high, having a spherical terminal about 68 feet in diameter. These dimensions
    were adequate for the transmission of virtually any amount of energy. Originally,
    only from 200 to 300 K.W. were provided, but I intended to employ later several
    thousand horsepower. The transmitter was to emit a wave-complex of special
    characteristics and I had devised a unique method of telephonic control of any
    amount of energy. The tower was destroyed two years ago (1917) but my projects
    are being developed and another one, improved in some features will be
    constructed.
    On this occasion I would contradict the widely circulated report that the structure
    was demolished by the Government, which owing to war conditions, might have
    created prejudice in the minds of those who may not know that the papers, which
    thirty years ago conferred upon me the honour of American citizenship, are always
    kept in a safe, while my orders, diplomas, degrees, gold medals and other
    distinctions are packed away in old trunks. If this report had a foundation, I would
    have been refunded a large sum of money which I expended in the construction of
    the tower. On the contrary, it was in the interest of the Government to preserver it,
    particularly as it would have made possible, to mention just one valuable result, the
    location of a submarine in any part of the world. My plant, services, and all my
    improvements have always been at the disposal of the officials and ever since the
    outbreak of the European conflict, I have been working at a sacrifice on several
    inventions of mine relating to aerial navigation, ship propulsion and wireless
    transmission, which are of the greatest importance to the country. Those who are
    well informed know that my ideas have revolutionised the industries of the United
    States and I am not aware that there lives an inventor who has been, in this respect,
    as fortunate as myself, — especially as regards the use of his improvements in the
    war.
    I have refrained from publicly expressing myself on this subject before, as it seemed
    improper to dwell on personal matters while all the world was in dire trouble. I
    would add further, in view of various rumours which have reached me, that Mr. J.
    Pierpont Morgan did not interest himself with me in a business way, but in the same
    large spirit in which he has assisted many other pioneers. He carried out his
    generous promise to the letter and it would have been most unreasonable to expect
    from him anything more. He had the highest regard for my attainments and gave me
    every evidence of his complete faith in my ability to ultimately achieve what I had
    set out to do. I am unwilling to accord to some small-minded and jealous
    individuals the satisfaction of having thwarted my efforts. These men are to me
    nothing more than microbes of a nasty disease. My project was retarded by laws of
    nature. The world was not prepared for it. It was too far ahead of time, but the same
    laws will prevail in the end and make it a triumphal success.
    30.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    Chapter 6
    No subject to which I have ever devoted myself has called for such concentration of
    mind, and strained to so dangerous a degree the finest fibres of my brain, as the
    systems of which the Magnifying transmitter is the foundation. I put all the intensity
    and vigour of youth in the development of the rotating field discoveries, but those
    early labours were of a different character. Although strenuous in the extreme, they
    did not involve that keen and exhausting discernment which had to be exercised in
    attacking the many problems of the wireless.
    Despite my rare physical endurance at that period, the abused nerves finally rebelled
    and I suffered a complete collapse, just as the consummation of the long and
    difficult task was almost in sight. Without doubt I would have paid a greater penalty
    later, and very likely my career would have been prematurely terminated, had not
    providence equipped me with a safety device, which seemed to improve with
    advancing years and unfailingly comes to play when my forces are at an end. So
    long as it operates I am safe from danger, due to overwork, which threatens other
    inventors, and incidentally, I need no vacations which are indispensable to most
    people. When I am all but used up, I simply do as the darkies who “naturally fall
    asleep while white folks worry.”
    To venture a theory out of my sphere, the body probably accumulates little by little
    a definite quantity of some toxic agent and I sink into a nearly lethargic state which
    lasts half an hour to the minute. Upon awakening I have the sensation as though the
    events immediately preceding had occurred very long ago, and if I attempt to
    continue the interrupted train of thought I feel veritable nausea. Involuntarily, I then
    turn to other and am surprised at the freshness of the mind and ease with which I
    overcome obstacles that had baffled me before. After weeks or months, my passion
    for the temporarily abandoned invention returns and I invariably find answers to all
    the vexing questions, with scarcely any effort. In this connection, I will tell of an
    extraordinary experience which may be of interest to students of psychology.
    I had produced a striking phenomenon with my grounded transmitter and was
    endeavouring to ascertain its true significance in relation to the currents propagated
    through the earth. It seemed a hopeless undertaking, and for more than a year I
    worked unremittingly, but in vain. This profound study so entirely absorbed me,
    that I became forgetful of everything else, even of my undermined health. At last, as
    I was at the point of breaking down, nature applied the preservative inducing lethal
    sleep. Regaining my senses, I realised with consternation that I was unable to
    visualise scenes from my life except those of infancy, the very first ones that had
    entered my consciousness. Curiously enough, these appeared before my vision with
    startling distinctness and afforded me welcome relief. Night after night, when
    retiring, I would think of them and more and more of my previous existence was
    revealed. The image of my mother was always the principal figure in the spectacle
    that slowly unfolded, and a consuming desire to see her again gradually took
    possession of me. This feeling grew so strong that I resolved to drop all work and
    satisfy my longing, but I found it too hard to break away from the laboratory, and
    several months elapsed during which I had succeeded in reviving all the
    impressions of my past life, up to the spring of 1892. In the next picture that came
    out of the mist of oblivion, I saw myself at the Hotel de la Paix in Paris, just coming
    to from one of my peculiar sleeping spells, which had
    31.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    been caused by prolonged exertion of the brain. Imagine the pain and distress I felt,
    when it flashed upon my mind that a dispatch was handed to me at that very
    moment, bearing the sad news that my mother was dying. I remembered how I
    made the long journey home without an hour of rest and how she passed away after
    weeks of agony.
    It was especially remarkable that during all this period of partially obliterated
    memory, I was fully alive to everything touching on the subject of my research. I
    could recall the smallest detail and the least insignificant observations in my
    experiments and even recite pages of text and complex mathematical formulae.
    My belief is firm in a law of compensation. The true rewards are ever in proportion
    to the labour and sacrifices made. This is one of the reasons why I feel certain that
    of all my inventions, the magnifying Transmitter will prove most important and
    valuable to future generations. I am prompted to this prediction, not so much by
    thoughts of the commercial and industrial revolution which it will surely bring
    about, but of the humanitation consequences of the many achievements it makes
    possible. Considerations of mere utility weigh little in the balance against the higher
    benefits of civilisation. We are confronted with portentous problems which can not
    be solved just by providing for our material existence, however abundantly. On the
    contrary, progress in this direction is fraught with hazards and perils not less
    menacing than those born from want and suffering. If we were to release the energy
    of atoms or discover some other way of developing cheap and unlimited power at
    any point on the globe, this accomplishment, instead of being a blessing, might
    bring disaster to mankind in giving rise to dissension and anarchy, which would
    ultimately result in the enthronement of the hated regime of force. The greatest
    good will come from technical improvements tending to unification and harmony,
    and my wireless transmitter is preeminently such. By its means, the human voice
    and likeness will be reproduced everywhere and factories driven thousands of miles
    from waterfalls furnishing power. Aerial machines will be propelled around the
    earth without a stop and the sun’s energy controlled to create lakes and rivers for
    motive purposes and transformation of arid deserts into fertile land. Its introduction
    for telegraphic, telephonic and similar uses, will automatically cut out the statics
    and all other interferences which at present, impose narrow limits to the application
    of the wireless. This is a timely topic on which a few words might not be amiss.
    During the past decade a number of people have arrogantly claimed that they had
    succeeded in doing away with this impediment. I have carefully examined all of the
    arrangements described and tested most of them long before they were publicly
    disclosed, but the finding was uniformly negative. Recent official statement from
    the U.S. Navy may, perhaps, have taught some beguilable news editors how to
    appraise these announcements at their real worth. As a rule, the attempts are based
    on theories so fallacious, that whenever they come to my notice, I can not help
    thinking in a light vein. Quite recently a new discovery was heralded, with a
    deafening flourish of trumpets, but it proved another case of a mountain bringing
    forth a mouse. This reminds me of an exciting incident which took place a year ago,
    when I was conducting my experiments with currents of high frequency.
    Steve Brodie had just jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge. The feat has been vulgarised
    since by imitators, but the first report electrified New York. I was very
    impressionable then and frequently spoke of the daring printer. On a hot afternoon I
    felt the necessity of refreshing myself and stepped into
    32.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    one of the popular thirty thousand institutions of this great city, where a delicious
    twelve per cent beverage was served, which can now be had only by making a trip
    to the poor and devastated countries of Europe. The attendance was large and not
    over-distinguished and a matter was discussed which gave me an admirable opening
    for the careless remark, “This is what I said when I jumped off the bridge.” No
    sooner had I uttered these words, than I felt like the companion of Timothens, in the
    poem of Schiller. In an instant there was pandemonium and a dozen voices cried, “It
    is Brodie!” I threw a quarter on the counter and bolted for the door, but the crowd
    was at my heels with yells, – “Stop, Steeve!”, which must have been
    misunderstood, for many persons tried to hold me up as I ran frantically for my
    haven of refuge. By darting around corners I fortunately managed, through the
    medium of a fire escape, to reach the laboratory, where I threw off my coat,
    camouflaged myself as a hard-working blacksmith and started the forge. But these
    precautions proved unnecessary, as I had eluded my pursuers. For many years
    afterward, at night, when imagination turns into spectres the trifling troubles of the
    day, I often thought, as I tossed on the bed, what my fate would have been, had the
    mob caught me and found out that I was not Steve Brodie!
    Now the engineer who lately gave an account before a technical body of a novel
    remedy against statics based on a “heretofore unknown law of nature,” seems to
    have been as reckless as myself when he contended that these disturbances
    propagate up and down, while those of a transmitter proceed along the earth. It
    would mean that a condenser as this globe, with its gaseous envelope, could be
    charged and discharged in a manner quite contrary to the fundamental teachings
    propounded in every elemental text book of physics. Such a supposition would have
    been condemned as erroneous, even in Franklin’s time, for the facts bearing on this
    were then well known and the identity between atmospheric electricity and that
    developed by machines was fully established. Obviously, natural and artificial
    disturbances propagate through the earth and the air in exactly the same way, and
    both set up electromotive forces in the horizontal, as well as vertical sense.
    Interference can not be overcome by any such methods as were proposed. The truth
    is this: In the air the potential increases at the rate of about fifty volts per foot of
    elevation, owing to which there may be a difference of pressure amounting to
    twenty, or even forty thousand volts between the upper and lower ends of the
    antenna. The masses of the charged atmosphere are constantly in motion and give
    up electricity to the conductor, not continuously, but rather disruptively, this
    producing a grinding noise in a sensitive telephonic receiver. The higher the
    terminal and the greater the space encompast by the wires, the more pronounced is
    the effect, but it must be understood that it is purely local and has little to do with
    the real trouble.
    In 1900, while perfecting my wireless system, one form of apparatus compressed
    four antennae. These were carefully calibrated in the same frequency and connected
    in multiple with the object of magnifying the action in receiving from any direction.
    When I desired to ascertain the origin of the transmitted impulse, each diagonally
    situated pair was put in series with a primary coil energising the detector circuit. In
    the former case, the sound was loud in the telephone; in the latter it ceased, as
    expected, – the two antennae neutralising each other, but the true statics manifested
    themselves in both instances and I had to devise special preventives embodying
    different principles. By employing receivers connected to two points of the ground,
    as suggested by me long ago, this trouble caused by the charged air, which is very
    serious in the structures as now built, is nullified and besides, the liability of all
    kinds of interference is reduced to about one-half because of the directional
    character of the circuit. This was perfectly self-evident, but
    33.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    came as a revelation to some simple-minded wireless folks whose experience was
    confined to forms of apparatus that could have been improved with an axe, and they
    have been disposing of the bear’s skin before killing him. If it were true that strays
    performed such antics, it would be easy to get rid of them by receiving without
    aerials. But, as a matter of fact, a wire buried in the ground which, conforming to
    this view, should be be absolutely immune, is more susceptible to certain
    extraneous impulses than one placed vertically in the air. To state it fairly, a slight
    progress has been made, but not by virtue of any particular method or device. It was
    achieved simply by discerning the enormous structures, which are bad enough for
    transmission but wholly unsuitable for reception and adopting a more appropriate
    type of receiver. As I have said before, to dispose of this difficulty for good, a
    radical change must be made in the system and the sooner this is done the better.
    It would be calamitous, indeed, if at this time when the art is in its infancy and the
    vast majority, not excepting even experts, have no conception of its ultimate
    possibilities, a measure would be rushed through the legislature making it a
    government monopoly. This was proposed a few weeks ago by Secretary Daniels
    and no doubt that distinguished official has made his appeal to the Senate and
    House of Representatives with sincere conviction. But universal evidence
    unmistakably shows that the best results are always obtained in healthful
    commercial competition. there are, however, exceptional reasons why wireless
    should be given the fullest freedom of development. In the first place, it offers
    prospects immeasurably greater and more vital to betterment of human life than any
    other invention or discovery in the history of man. Then again, it must be
    understood that this wonderful art has been, in its entirety, evolved here and can be
    called “American” with more right and propriety than the telephone, the
    incandescent lamp or the aeroplane.
    Enterprising press agents and stock jobbers have been so successful in spreading
    misinformation, that even so excellent a periodical as the *Scientific American*,
    accords the chief credit to a foreign country. The Germans, of course, gave us the
    Hertz waves and the Russian, English, French and Italian experts were quick in
    using them for signalling purposes. It was an obvious application of the new agent
    and accomplished with the old classical and unimproved induction coil, scarcely
    anything more than another kind of heliography. The radius of transmission was
    very limited, the result attained of little value, and the Hertz oscillations, as a means
    for conveying intelligence, could have been advantageously replaced by sound
    waves, which I advocated in 1891. Moreover, all of these attempts were made three
    years after the basic principles of the wireless system, which is universally
    employed today, and its potent instrumentalities had been clearly described and
    developed in America.
    No trace of those Hertzian appliances and methods remains today. We have
    proceeded in the very opposite direction and what has been done is the product of
    the brains and efforts of citizens of this country. The fundamental patents have
    expired and the opportunities are open to all. The chief argument of the Secretary is
    based on interference. According to his statement, reported in the New York Herald
    of July 29th, signals from a powerful station can be intercepted in every village in
    the world. In view of this fact, which was demonstrated in my experiments in 1900,
    it would be of little use to impose restrictions in the United States.
    As throwing light on this point, I may mention that only recently an odd looking
    gentleman called on me with the object of enlisting my services in the construction
    of world transmitters in some distant land. “We have no money,”
    34.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    he said, “but carloads of solid gold, and we will give you a liberal amount.” I told
    him that I wanted to see first what will be done with my inventions in America, and
    this ended the interview. But I am satisfied that some dark forces are at work, and as
    time goes on the maintenance of continuous communication will be rendered more
    difficult. The only remedy is a system immune against interruption. It has been
    perfected, it exists, and all that is necessary is to put it in operation.
    The terrible conflict is still uppermost in the minds and perhaps the greatest
    importance will be attached to the magnifying Transmitter as a machine for attack
    and defence, more particularly in connection with TELAUTAMATICS. This
    invention is a logical outcome of observations begun in my boyhood and continued
    throughout my life. When the first results were published, the Electrical Review
    stated editorially that it would become one of the “most potent factors in the
    advance of civilisation of mankind.” The time is not distant when this prediction
    will be fulfilled. In 1898 and 1900, it was offered by me to the Government and
    might have been adopted, were I one of those who would go to Alexander’s
    shepherd when they want a favour from Alexander!
    At that time I really thought that it would abolish war, because of its unlimited
    destructiveness and exclusion of the personal element of combat. But while I have
    not lost faith in its potentialities, my views have changed since. War can not be
    avoided until the physical cause for its recurrence is removed and this, in the last
    analysis, is the vast extent of the planet on which we live. Only though annihilation
    of distance in every respect, as the conveyance of intelligence, transport of
    passengers and supplies and transmission of energy will conditions be brought
    about some day, insuring permanency of friendly relations. What we now want
    most is closer contact and better understanding between individuals and
    communities all over the earth and the elimination of that fanatic devotion to
    exalted ideals of national egoism and pride, which is always prone to plunge the
    world into primeval barbarism and strife. No league or parliamentary act of any
    kind will ever prevent such a calamity. These are only new devices for putting the
    weak at the mercy of the strong.
    I have expressed myself in this regard fourteen years ago, when a combination of a
    few leading governments, a sort of Holy alliance, was advocated by the late Andrew
    Carnegie, who may be fairly considered as the father of this idea, having given to it
    more publicity and impetus than anybody else prior to the efforts of the President.
    While it can not be denied that such aspects might be of material advantage to some
    less fortunate peoples, it can not attain the chief objective sought. Peace can only
    come as a natural consequence of universal enlightenment and merging of races,
    and we are still far from this blissful realisation, because few indeed, will admit the
    reality – that God made man in His image – in which case all earth men are alike.
    There is in fact but one race, of many colours. Christ is but one person, yet he is of
    all people, so why do some people think themselves better than some other people?
    As I view the world of today, in the light of the gigantic struggle we have
    witnessed, I am filled with conviction that the interests of humanity would be best
    served if the United States remained true to its traditions, true to God whom it
    pretends to believe, and kept out of “entangling alliances.” Situated as it is,
    geographically remote from the theatres of impending conflicts, without incentive to
    territorial aggrandisement, with inexhaustible resources and immense population
    thoroughly imbued with the spirit of liberty and right, this country is placed in a
    unique and privileged position. It is
    35.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    thus able to exert, independently, its colossal strength and moral force to the benefit
    of all, more judiciously and effectively, than as a member of a league.
    I have dwelt on the circumstances of my early life and told of an affliction which
    compelled me to unremitting exercise of imagination and self-observation. This
    mental activity, at first involuntary under the pressure of illness and suffering,
    gradually became second nature and led me finally to recognise that I was but an
    automaton devoid of free will in thought and action and merely responsible to the
    forces of the environment. Our bodies are of such complexity of structure, the
    motions we perform are so numerous and involved and the external impressions on
    our sense organs to such a degree delicate and elusive, that it is hard for the average
    person to grasp this fact. Yet nothing is more convincing to the trained investigator
    than the mechanistic theory of life which had been, in a measure, understood and
    propounded by Descartes three hundred years ago. In his time many important
    functions of our organisms were unknown and especially with respect to the nature
    of light and the construction and operation of the eye, philosophers were in the dark.
    In recent years the progress of scientific research in these fields has been such as to
    leave no room for a doubt in regard to this view on which many works have been
    published. One of its ablest and most eloquent exponents is, perhaps, Felix le
    Dantec, formerly assistant of Pasteur. Professor Jacques Loeb has performed
    remarkable experiments in heliotropism, clearly establishing the controlling power
    of light in lower forms of organisms and his latest book, “Forced Movements,” is
    revelatory. But while men of science accept this theory simply as any other that is
    recognised, to me it is a truth which I hourly demonstrate by every act and thought
    of mine. The consciousness of the external impression prompting me to any kind of
    exertion, – physical or mental, is ever present in my mind. Only on very rare
    occasions, when I was in a state of exceptional concentration, have I found
    difficulty in locating the original impulse. The by far greater number of human
    beings are never aware of what is passing around and within them and millions fall
    victims of disease and die prematurely just on this account. The commonest, every-day
    occurrences appear to them mysterious and inexplicable. One may feel a
    sudden wave of sadness and rack his brain for an explanation, when he might have
    noticed that it was caused by a cloud cutting off the rays of the sun. He may see the
    image of a friend dear to him under conditions which he construes as very peculiar,
    when only shortly before he has passed him in the street or seen his photograph
    somewhere. When he loses a collar button, he fusses and swears for an hour, being
    unable to visualise his previous actions and locate the object directly. Deficient
    observation is merely a form of ignorance and responsible for the many morbid
    notions and foolish ideas prevailing. There is not more than one out of every ten
    persons who does not believe in telepathy and other psychic manifestations,
    spiritualism and communion with the dead, and who would refuse to listen to
    willing or unwilling deceivers?
    Just to illustrate how deeply rooted this tendency has become even among the clear-headed
    American population, I may mention a comical incident. Shortly before the
    war, when the exhibition of my turbines in this city elicited widespread comment in
    the technical papers, I anticipated that there would be a scramble among
    manufacturers to get hold of the invention and I had particular designs on that man
    from Detroit who has an uncanny faculty for accumulating millions. So confident
    was I, that he would turn up some day, that I declared this as certain to my secretary
    and assistants. Sure enough, one fine morning a body of engineers from the Ford
    Motor Company presented them-36.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    selves with the request of discussing with me an important project. “Didn’t I tell
    you?,” I remarked triumphantly to my employees, and one of them said, “You are
    amazing, Mr. Tesla. Everything comes out exactly as you predict.”
    As soon as these hard-headed men were seated, I of course, immediately began to
    extol the wonderful features of my turbine, when the spokesman interrupted me and
    said, “We know all about this, but we are on a special errand. We have formed a
    psychological society for the investigation of psychic phenomena and we want you
    to join us in this undertaking.” I suppose these engineers never knew how near they
    came to being fired out of my office.
    Ever since I was told by some of the greatest men of the time, leaders in science
    whose names are immortal, that I am possessed of an unusual mind, I bent all my
    thinking faculties on the solution of great problems regardless of sacrifice. For
    many years I endeavoured to solve the enigma of death, and watched eagerly for
    every kind of spiritual indication. But only once in the course of my existence have
    I had an experience which momentarily impressed me as supernatural. It was at the
    time of my mother’s death.
    I had become completely exhausted by pain and long vigilance, and one night was
    carried to a building about two blocks from our home. As I lay helpless there, I
    thought that if my mother died while I was away from her bedside, she would surely
    give me a sign. Two or three months before, I was in London in company with my
    late friend, Sir William Crookes, when spiritualism was discussed and I was under
    the full sway of these thoughts. I might not have paid attention to other men, but
    was susceptible to his arguments as it was his epochal work on radiant matter,
    which I had read as a student, that made me embrace the electrical career. I reflected
    that the conditions for a look into the beyond were most favourable, for my mother
    was a woman of genius and particularly excelling in the powers of intuition. During
    the whole night every fibre in my brain was strained in expectancy, but nothing
    happened until early in the morning, when I fell in a sleep, or perhaps a swoon, and
    saw a cloud carrying angelic figures of marvellous beauty, one of whom gazed upon
    me lovingly and gradually assumed the features of my mother. The appearance
    slowly floated across the room and vanished, and I was awakened by an
    indescribably sweet song of many voices. In that instant a certitude, which no words
    can express, came upon me that my mother had just died. And that was true. I was
    unable to understand the tremendous weight of the painful knowledge I received in
    advance, and wrote a letter to Sir William Crookes while still under the domination
    of these impressions and in poor bodily health. When I recovered, I sought for a
    long time the external cause of this strange manifestation and, to my great relief, I
    succeeded after many months of fruitless effort.
    I had seen the painting of a celebrated artist, representing allegorically one of the
    seasons in the form of a cloud with a group of angels which seemed to actually float
    in the air, and this had struck me forcefully. It was exactly the same that appeared in
    my dream, with the exception of my mother’s likeness. The music came from the
    choir in the church nearby at the early mass of Easter morning, explaining
    everything satisfactorily in conformity with scientific facts.
    This occurred long ago, and I have never had the faintest reason since to change my
    views on psychical and spiritual phenomena, for which there is no foundation. The
    belief in these is the natural outgrowth of intellectual development. Religious
    dogmas are no longer accepted in their orthodox meaning, but every individual
    clings to faith in a supreme power of some kind.
    37.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    We all must have an ideal to govern our conduct and insure contentment, but it is
    immaterial whether it be one of creed, art, science, or anything else, so long as it
    fulfils the function of a dematerialising force. It is essential to the peaceful existence
    of humanity as a whole that one common conception should prevail. While I have
    failed to obtain any evidence in support of the contentions of psychologists and
    spiritualists, I have proved to my complete satisfaction the automatism of life, not
    only through continuous observations of individual actions, but even more
    conclusively through certain generalisations. these amount to a discovery which I
    consider of the greatest moment to human society, and on which I shall briefly
    dwell.
    I got the first inkling of this astonishing truth when I was still a very young man, but
    for many years I interpreted what I noted simply as coincidences. Namely,
    whenever either myself or a person to whom I was attached, or a cause to which I
    was devoted, was hurt by others in a particular way, which might be best popularly
    characterised as the most unfair imaginable, I experienced a singular and
    undefinable pain which, for the want of a better term, I have qualified as “cosmic”
    and shortly thereafter, and invariably, those who had inflicted it came to grief. After
    many such cases I confided this to a number of friends, who had the opportunity to
    convince themselves of the theory of which I have gradually formulated and which
    may be stated in the following few words: Our bodies are of similar construction
    and exposed to the same external forces. This results in likeness of response and
    concordance of the general activities on which all our social and other rules and
    laws are based. We are automata entirely controlled by the forces of the medium,
    being tossed about like corks on the surface of the water, but mistaking the resultant
    of the impulses from the outside for the free will. The movements and other actions
    we perform are always life preservative and though seemingly quite independent
    from one another, we are connected by invisible links. So long as the organism is in
    perfect order, it responds accurately to the agents that prompt it, but the moment
    that there is some derangement in any individual, his self-preservative power is
    impaired.
    Everybody understands, of course, that if one becomes deaf, has his eyes weakened,
    or his limbs injured, the chances for his continued existence are lessened. But this is
    also true, and perhaps more so, of certain defects in the brain which drive the
    automaton, more or less, of that vital quality and cause it to rush into destruction. A
    very sensitive and observant being, with his highly developed mechanism all intact,
    and acting with precision in obedience to the changing conditions of the
    environment, is endowed with a transcending mechanical sense, enabling him to
    evade perils too subtle to be directly perceived. When he comes in contact with
    others whose controlling organs are radically faulty, that sense asserts itself and he
    feels the “cosmic” pain.
    The truth of this has been borne out in hundreds of instances and I am inviting other
    students of nature to devote attention to this subject, believing that through
    combined systematic effort, results of incalculable value to the world will be
    attained. The idea of constructing an automaton, to bear out my theory, presented
    itself to me early, but I did not begin active work until 1895, when I started my
    wireless investigations. During the succeeding two or three years, a number of
    automatic mechanisms, to be actuated from a distance, were constructed by me and
    exhibited to visitors in my laboratory.
    In 1896, however, I designed a complete machine capable of a multitude of
    operations, but the consummation of my labours was delayed until late in 1897.
    38.The Strange Life of Nikla Tesla
    This machine was illustrated and described in my article in the Century Magazine
    of June, 1900; and other periodicals of that time and when first shown in the
    beginning of 1898, it created a sensation such as no other invention of mine has
    ever produced. In November, 1898, a basic patent on the novel art was granted to
    me, but only after the Examiner-in-Chief had come to New York and witnessed the
    performance, for what I claimed seemed unbelievable. I remember that when later I
    called on an official in Washington, with a view of offering the invention to the
    Government, he burst out in laughter upon my telling him what I had accomplished.
    Nobody thought then that there was the faintest prospect of perfecting such a
    device. It is unfortunate that in this patent, following the advice of my attorneys, I
    indicated the control as being affected through the medium of a single circuit and a
    well-known form of detector, for the reason that I had not yet secured protection on
    my methods and apparatus for individualisation. As a matter of fact, my boats were
    controlled through the joint action of several circuits and interference of every kind
    was excluded.
    Most generally, I employed receiving circuits in the form of loops, including
    condensers, because the discharges of my high-tension transmitter ionised the air in
    the (laboratory) so that even a very small aerial would draw electricity from the
    surrounding atmosphere for hours.
    Just to give an idea, I found, for instance, that a bulb twelve inches in diameter,
    highly exhausted, and with one single terminal to which a short wire was attached,
    would deliver well on to one thousand successive flashes before all charge of the air
    in the laboratory was neutralised. The loop form of receiver was not sensitive to
    such a disturbance and it is curious to note that it is becoming popular at this late
    date. In reality, it collects much less energy than the aerials or a long grounded wire,
    but it so happens that it does away with a number of defects inherent to the present
    wireless devices.
    In demonstrating my invention before audiences, the visitors were requested to ask
    questions, however involved, and the automaton would answer them by signs. This
    was considered magic at the time, but was extremely simple, for it was myself who
    gave the replies by means of the device.
    At the same period, another larger telautomatic boat was constructed, a photograph
    of which was shown in the October 1919 number of the Electrical Experimenter. It
    was controlled by loops, having several turns placed in the hull, which was made
    entirely water-tight and capable of submergence. The apparatus was similar to that
    used in the first with the exception of certain special features I introduced as, for
    example, incandescent lamps which afforded a visible evidence of the proper
    functioning of the machine. These automata, controlled within the range of vision of
    the operator, were, however, the first and rather crude steps in the evolution of the
    art of Telautomatics as I had conceived it.
    The next logical improvement was its application to automatic mechanisms beyond
    the limits of vision and at great distances from the centre of control, and I have ever
    since advocated their employment as instruments of warfare in preference to guns.
    The importance of this now seems to be recognised, if I am to judge from casual
    announcements through the press, of achievements which are said to be
    extraordinary but contain no merit of novelty, whatever. In an imperfect manner it
    is practicable, with the existing wireless plants, to launch an aeroplane, have it
    follow a certain approximate course, and perform some operation at a distance of
    many hundreds of miles. A machine of this kind can also be mechanically
    controlled in several ways and I have no doubt
    39.The Strange Life of Nikola Tesla
    that it may prove of some usefulness in war. But there are to my best knowledge, no
    instrumentalities in existence today with which such an object could be
    accomplished in a precise manner. I have devoted years of study to this matter and
    have evolved means, making such and greater wonders easily realisable.
    As stated on a previous occasion, when I was a student at college I conceived a
    flying machine quite unlike the present ones. The underlying principle was sound,
    but could not be carried into practice for want of a prime-mover of sufficiently great
    activity. In recent years, I have successfully solved this problem and am now
    planning aerial machines *devoid of sustaining planes, ailerons, propellers, and
    other external* attachments, which will be capable of immense speeds and are very
    likely to furnish powerful arguments for peace in the near future. Such a machine,
    sustained and propelled *entirely by reaction*, is shown on one of the pages of my
    lectures, and is supposed to be controlled either mechanically, or by wireless
    energy. By installing proper plants, it will be practicable to *project a missile of this
    kind into the air and drop it* almost on the very spot designated, which may be
    thousands of miles away.
    But we are not going to stop at this. Telautomats will be ultimately produced,
    capable of acting as if possessed of their own intelligence, and their advent will
    create a revolution. As early as 1898, I proposed to representatives of a large
    manufacturing concern the construction and public exhibition of an automobile
    carriage which, left to itself, would perform a great variety of operations involving
    something akin to judgment. But my proposal was deemed chimerical at the time
    and nothing came of it.
    At present, many of the ablest minds are trying to devise expedients for preventing
    a repetition of the awful conflict which is only theoretically ended and the duration
    and main issues of which I have correctly predicted in an article printed in the SUN
    of December 20, 1914. The proposed League is not a remedy but, on the contrary,
    in the opinion of a number of competent men, may bring about results just the
    opposite.
    It is particularly regrettable that a punitive policy was adopted in framing the terms
    of peace, because a few years hence, it will be possible for nations to fight without
    armies, ships or guns, by weapons far more terrible, to the destructive action and
    range of which there is virtually no limit. Any city, at a distance, whatsoever, from
    the enemy, can be destroyed by him and no power on earth can stop him from doing
    so. If we want to avert an impending calamity and a state of things which may
    transform the globe into an inferno, we should push the development of flying
    machines and wireless transmission of energy without an instant’s delay and with
    all the power and resources of the nation.
    40.

    May 23, 2008 at 11:42 pm #28323
    russelln
    Participant

    Thanks for this posting.
    I have copied a few extracts here,:
    “A plant was built on Long Island with a tower 187 feet high, having a spherical terminal about 68 feet in diameter. These dimensions were adequate for the transmission of virtually any amount of energy. Originally, only from 200 to 300 K.W. were provided, but I intended to employ later several thousand horsepower. The transmitter was to emit a wave-complex of special characteristics and I had devised a unique method of telephonic control of any amount of energy. The tower was destroyed two years ago (1917) but my projects are being developed and another one, improved in some features will be constructed.

    My project was retarded by laws of nature. The world was not prepared for it. It was too far ahead of time, but the same laws will prevail in the end and make it a triumphal success.

    …. I feel certain that of all my inventions, the magnifying Transmitter will prove most important and valuable to future generations.”

    Makes you wonder whether the time for revival has arrived.
    Here’s an idea. Any practitioners interested could do Greater Kan Li practice or higher and seek some guidance here, including any appropriate safeguards, on humanity manifesting such energy technology. Wonder what result might be. Link below has interesting inspirational little movie.
    R

    http://www.lunarplanner.com/HCmovies/HCmovie300Frame.html

    June 4, 2008 at 1:10 pm #28325
    Dog
    Participant

    I see studies of migration, and of early hominids, but not a targeted study of why only one form of hominid exists today. If you ask the taosist they say it has to do with what the west called the seven sisters. I would like to read the scientific theory on the subject, I could not find a single theory as to why homosapiens got the abilities they did to advance and out compete other hominids. What made homosapien differnt?

    June 4, 2008 at 3:13 pm #28327
    Steven
    Moderator

    In all seriousness, I think there had to be some kind of
    evolutionary jump. It’s the only thing that seems to
    explain it.

    Actually I was just reading how it’s been discovered that
    animals have a built-in evolutionary process mode. Under
    certain conditions, the species can shift into this mode
    producing a large number of mutations in the offspring
    and helping to cause *rapid* evolution of the species.
    Then, after whatever need has been met, the process
    mysteriously shuts off, and the newly evolved species
    returns to a state of normal, slow evolution.

    It appears that *slow evolution* is caused by the aggregrate
    of individual processes–a reproduction of the fittest.
    It appears that *fast evolution* is caused by a collective
    process. Some sort of collective wisdom of the whole species
    under a certain need triggers the fast evolution mode.

    *Fast evolution* is somewhat mysterious . . . and your 2001 humor
    becomes not outside the realm of possibility believe it or not.

    Steven

    June 5, 2008 at 1:58 pm #28329
    Dog
    Participant

    I am a believer, believe it or not. :).

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