NICOLA TESLA – 20TH
CENTURY DISCOVERER
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
î January 2010, L.D. Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All
information in this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment,
prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
On
January 15, 1943, more than one thousand distinguished citizens gathered in the
massive cathedral of St. Johns The Divine in New York to pay their respects to
one of the greatest scientists of all time. He had electrified the world and given it radio, radar,
television, microwaves, touch-tone dialing and hundreds of other devices we use
every day. Yet few people even
know the name of Dr. Nikola Tesla.
Dr.
Tesla was a brilliant scientist whose discoveries often occurred as flashes of
insight and visions. Some say he
invented over a thousand devices, very few of which have been developed. He even found ways to tap into
unlimited energy sources from the earth.
He said his method was to deeply explore the laws of nature. Once he understood her laws, building
devices to work with nature was easy, he said. Tesla could construct and run an invention such as a motor
in his head for weeks, and then mentally examine each part of it for signs of
wear. He would then build the
device without plans or blueprints.
He had other unusual abilities, such as being able to predict events
before they occurred.
Nikola
Tesla was born in Yugoslavia, near the Turkish border. He was a voracious reader and learned
to speak and read over a dozen languages.
He studied electrical engineering, physics and mathematics. He worked for a time in Paris, but the
Europeans showed little interest in his inventions. America was the land of technical innovation. In 1884, he came to New York City to
work with Thomas Edison. Just
before he immigrated, he was robbed and arrived in New York with only four
cents and a book of poetry in his pocket.
NICOLA TESLA AND THOMAS EDISON
Many
exciting inventions were coming from Thomas Edison's laboratory in New
Jersey. Edison had thrilled the
world with his light bulb, phonograph, electric car and other wonders. (Thomas Edison drove around in an
electric car in 1890.) Edison was
also a businessman who had built many power stations supplying electricity to
New York City. All of them
produced direct current or DC.
Tesla had invented (he preferred the word discovered) a much more
efficient electric power system.
Instead of direct current, Tesla's system used alternating current or
AC. The advantage of AC is it can
be transmitted over long distances with almost no power loss. Direct current required booster stations
about every square mile within a city.
The young Mr. Tesla hoped Mr. Edison would be interested in his
innovation.
Edison
was not interested, however. He
had invested heavily in the DC substations. When Edison's commercial interests were threatened, he
became hostile toward Tesla and tried to discredit him. Tesla's only interest was in improving
the lot of humanity. When Edison
cheated Tesla out of $50,000.00, Tesla quit working for him.
Without
income, Tesla at one point dug ditches for a living. However, he soon obtained funds to set up his own
laboratory. In rapid succession,
he received some 28 patents on his alternating current electrical system. George Westinghouse, an engineer and
inventor in his own right, decided to finance Tesla. A lasting friendship developed between the two men.
Soon
after, Westinghouse built the first large power station in America at Niagara
Falls using Tesla's alternating current system. It supplied power to all of New York State and surrounding
states as well. It firmly
established TeslaÕs alternating current system as the standard. Tesla's AC motor, which came to him in
a vision while he was reciting a poem, is today found in every home appliance,
tool and motor powered by AC electricity.
OTHER DISCOVERIES
Tesla
realized that Edison's light bulb wasted energy. Tesla improved the filament and later developed the far more
efficient fluorescent light bulb.
Tesla also invented radio.
Marconi, a student of Tesla, still receives credit as the inventor of
radio. However, in 1943, the
United States Supreme Court overturned Marconi's patent and declared Tesla the
true inventor of radio. Later in
his life, Marconi duplicated many of Tesla's devices, including particle beams
and anti-gravity devices. Many great
scientists of the twentieth century gave Tesla credit for inspiring their work.
Tesla
was a very spiritual man, much concerned with the pressing problems of human
existence. Tesla patented what he
called the "anti-war machine".
It was radar. Tesla thought
that if we knew when an enemy was arriving, maybe it would stop wards. In 1927, he patented a particle
beam 'death ray' that sends very concentrated amounts of power through the air. The beam could be set up to surround a
nation. It would destroy any
incoming ship, plane or missile.
Tesla offered the device to England to help prevent the Nazi bombing of
London during World War II.
Unfortunately, the English refused the device. Today, the particle beam is still a military secret, used in
the 'star wars' missile defense system and similar to laser weapons now in
available to the military.
Another invention that Tesla thought would eliminate
the need for human armies was the discovery of robotics or remote control. Tesla said it would be possible to send
machines to fight one another, sparing human lives. In 1899, Tesla offered the US Navy a remote-controlled
submarine that fired torpedoes to help win the Spanish-American War. He was laughed at, although he
demonstrated the technology with a working model in New York harbor. Robotic planes and tanks are only now
being deployed by the military.
Tesla
discovered x-rays before Madame Curie.
He stopped his x-ray experiments when he realized they were making him
and his staff ill. Tesla gave us
microwave technology now used for all telephone communications. He invented ozone generators,
touch-tone dialing, alternators, anti-gravity devices, two-way radios that
worked anywhere on the planet, and many other items. Tesla transformer design is used today in automobile
ignition coils, televisions, computer monitors, and hundreds of other
applications.
In
1913, he patented a turbine engine that is virtually silent and has no
blades. He also invented an
oscillating internal combustion motor that is several times more efficient than
present designs.
Another
area in which Tesla experimented was the application of electricity for healing
the body. He designed an 'energy
bath' that sends beneficial frequencies to the body. Tesla credited his long life to the regular use of this
machine. The device is not harmful
in any way, but it is banned by the Food and Drug Administration, which bans
many useful devices that may compete with drug company interests.
WHY IS TESLA UNKNOWN?
Why
have we not heard of this wonderful man?
One reason is he offered the world inventions that some are not ready to
allow on the market. Along with
suppressing these inventions, has come the suppression of the name of Tesla
himself.
For
example, Tesla considered his greatest invention to be wireless power
transmission. In November of 1898,
Tesla announced that he could supply power to the Paris Exhibition from the
power station at Niagra Falls, New York "without wires"! He constructed two large towers, one on
Long Island and the other in Colorado Springs, from which electrical power
could be beamed to the ionosphere.
From there, it could be tapped by everyone in the world. Had the work continued, electric power
would be free for anyone in the world just be setting up an antenna.
There
would be no pollution of the air from automobiles and aircraft. They would be powered by electricity
beamed to them through the air.
Third world nations would benefit the most, as many still have no
electrical power in rural areas.
Hunger and disease are often due to a lack of electric power for
irrigation, cultivation, refrigeration, transportation, and other aspects of
growing and distributing food and other necessities of life.
This
invention would have opened up vast new industries, and in Tesla's words,
"moved all of civilization ahead by 100 years". Of course, it also would have meant
that his alternating current system, with billions invested around the world,
would have become obsolete. His
electric towers were mysteriously destroyed by fire, and soon he found he could
no longer obtain funding for any of his projects.
Tesla
also found ways to extract power from the air. The earth spins very rapidly on its axis, generating huge
amounts of static electricity. It
is possible to harness this electricity for the free use of all people on the
earth. In fact, we live in a sea of energy just waiting to be tapped.
Finally,
Tesla is thought to have developed technology for interplanetary
communication. He stated that it
took him two years to break the code.
Later in his life, he spent up to two hours a day in this
communication. On several
occasions, he said that we are not alone in the universe.
MODERN TESLA RESEARCH
Although
Tesla died almost seventy years ago, some of his research is alive and
well. I attended several
conferences where new inventions are displayed based on Tesla's discoveries.
One
was a steam generator that has no boiler.
Instead it has an ignition chamber where water, fuel and a spark combine
to produce instant steam at any desired pressure or temperature. The device runs on any burnable
fuel. There are hundreds of
applications, from automobile propulsion to putting out fires.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF TESLA
In
many ways the story of Tesla is the story of idealistic men and women who care
only about the welfare of humanity.
They are often ridiculed, persecuted, and their work discredited. Tesla lived to see the world
transformed by alternating current, radio, television and radar. However, he died broken-hearted that
humanity missed the opportunity to bring free, non-polluting energy to everyone
on the planet.
The
message of Tesla's work for me is there is no scarcity. Solutions exist for all our technical
problems. We are held back only by
our disbelief and our unwillingness to accept the love of the Creator for us in
terms of material help. Instead we
doubt, fill ourselves with fear, and believe in scarcity. We believe leaders who perpetuate the
lie of scarcity and spread fear and limitation.
Is
it not time to implement technologies that would end pollution, hunger and lack
of shelter, and fulfill the basic needs of everyone on earth? A key to making this happen is to know
solutions exist and to learn about them.
Also, is it not time for each person to become inspired and creative,
instead of fearful and depressed by the world situation? For those interested in Tesla, many
technical and non-technical books and a few films are available. Some are listed below and may be found
at libraries.
Resources
1.
Cheney, Margaret, Tesla, Man out of Time,
Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1981.
2.
Hunt, Inez, Lightning in His Hand, The
Life Story of Nikola Tesla, Omni Publications, Hawthorne, CA, 1964.
3.
O'Neil, John, Prodigal Genius-The Life of
Nikola Tesla, Angriff Press, 1981.
4.
Tesla, Nikola, My Inventions:
Autobiography of Nikola Tesla, edited by Ben Johnson, Hart Brothers, 1982.
5.
Tesla, Nikola, Catalogue of Patents,
Vanous, Arthur, CO, 1988.
6.
Walters, Helen, Nikola Tesla, Giant of
Electricity, Crowell, NY, 1961.
7.
Storm, Margaret, Return of the Dove,
Health Research, Mokelume Hill, CA, 1972.
8. The
Secret of Nikola Tesla (Film starring Orson Wells, available on VHS).
9.
Special on Tesla – Corporation For Public Broadcasting
10.
Tesla Tech (magazine).
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