Nikola Tesla Still Alive After Death
Nikola Tesla
is the man responsible for every form of modern technology we have
available to us today. There would be no Twittering, Googling,
BlackBerrys, cell phones, satellites in space, airplanes, x-rays, or
physics as we know it.
Nicolas Tesla was born on July 9th, 1856 at Midnight.
One man certainly remembered Nikola Tesla this week,
Dr. Ljubo Vujovic.
Dr. Vujovic is nominated this year to receive the American Biographical
Institute, Inc. Award: "2009 Man of the Year in Education" for his work
as President and Editor of the Tesla Memorial Society of New York
website, which is one of the main sources of information about the
famous inventor and scientist Nikola Tesla as well as other world
figures in history.
It’s fascinating that Tesla has more notoriety
for the lack of attribution given him than all his works combined.
Though great efforts have been made by scholars all over the world, to
finally give recognition to the genius and contributions of this great
man; there still remains an air of mystery surrounding his life and
works.
Many consider that the most obvious of reasons was that his
inventions were way too progressive for the technical resources
available and much too far advanced for humanity’s collective psyche at
the time. Many theories point to his lack of business sense and his
failed project with J.P. Morgan while building the
"The Tower of Dreams,”
The Tower of Dreams was to be a World Broadcasting Tower in Long Island
that would have broadcast telephone messages across the ocean; news,
music, stock market reports, private messages, secure military
communications, and even pictures to any part of the world. But funding
ran out in the middle of the project and other more insidious
circumstances prevailed at the end.
Tesla told Morgan, "When
wireless is fully applied, the earth will be converted into a huge
brain, capable of response in every one of its parts."
Tesla
predicted the birth of the Internet and our computers. In
1937, he said, “At this very moment scientists working in the
laboratories of American universities are attempting to create what has
been described as a "thinking machine." I anticipated this development.”
He also invented our future wireless boxes at the turn of the century.
The
Teleautomaton,
was a device Tesla invented in the 1890’s. It has a spooky resemblance
to our wireless internet connection boxes that make it possible for us
to sit in places like Starbucks and drink coffee while type on our
laptops. Wireless makes it possible for us to talk on our cell phones,
fly our airplanes, watch our reality TV, and listen to our radios while
waiting in traffic.
The Teleautomaton was simply an apparatus with
Tesla coils.
These coils, in the initial experiment were inserted into a boat and
tuned to resonate with other coils located on shore. By tuning the
coils, an operator on shore could remotely control the boat.
His resonance experiments at one point got a little out of hand even here in New York.
"In
his lab at 46 E. Houston Street, while conducting mechanical resonance
experiments with electro-mechanical oscillators, he generated a
resonance of several surrounding buildings but, due to the frequencies
involved, not his own building, causing complaints to the police. As the
speed grew he hit the resonant frequency of his own building and,
belatedly realizing the danger, he was forced to apply a sledgehammer to
terminate the experiment, just as the astonished police arrived.
(Wikipedia: O'Neill, "Prodigal Genius" pp 162-164).
It
was probably experiments like those that got Tesla branded as a mad
scientist. He has been accredited with experiments in time-travel, alien
communication, and machines that record thought among many others. His
later experiments in accessing “free energy” most likely got him in even
more disfavor. Generally, not being able to “bill” energy, wouldn't
have gone over too well with the “the powers that be.”
We tend to
attribute “genius” to spiritual force or a gift from the Divine Spirit.
Though Tesla had no gripe with religion, he said, “Religion gave man
“ideals” that give significance to his life and most importantly
promoted “good conduct,” he surprisingly (though associated with occult
activities and so forth), had purely mechanistic views of mankind.
“To
me, the universe is simply a great machine which never came into being
and never will end. The human being is no exception to the natural
order. Man, like the universe, is a machine. Nothing enters our minds or
determines our actions which is not directly or indirectly a response
to stimuli beating upon our sense organs from without. Owing to the
similarity of our construction and the sameness of our environment, we
respond in like manner to similar stimuli, and from the concordance of
our reactions, understanding is barn. In the course of ages, mechanisms
of infinite complexity are developed, but what we call "soul” or
"spirit," is nothing more than the sum of the functionings of the body.
When this functioning ceases, the "soul" or the "spirit" ceases
likewise.” (Source)
Most of us consider Tesla a visionary before his time; but surprisingly Tesla says in his own words:
“My
enemies have been so successful in portraying me as a poet and a
visionary," said Tesla, "that I must put out something commercial
without delay." (Source)
Was
he joking? Was he truly a pure scientist? Would his experiments
eventually lead him to harnessing spiritual force? Would Tesla have
found the “God” particle?
The bottom-line is Tesla certainly bridged the gap between science and spirit; whether he acknowledged this or not.
Maybe he didn’t believe in life-after-death, but his inventions surely have kept him very much alive-after-death.
Resources:
Tesla Memorial Society of New York
PBS Tesla Master of Lightening
Nikola Tesla Biography
Wikipedia Nikola Tesla
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