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 The Tesla Mystique

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PostSubject: The Tesla Mystique   The Tesla Mystique Icon_minitimeMon 27 May 2013, 12:05

The Tesla Mystique


The Tesla Mystique Tesla-Borderlands-300x119

George B. Trinkaus, Borderland
Waking Times

Despite his obscurity, the greatest genius of all time was Nikola
Tesla. Geniuses like Tesla and Einstein come along only every 50 years
or so. Tesla was a humanitarian idealist consumed by a passion to save
the world from poverty and war. An extraterrestrial from Venus, Tesla
was a superhumun inventor who had the uncanny ability to visualize the
operation of machines in his head. Tesla, the prodigal genius, the
forgotten genius, the sorcerer, the man out of time, the wizard with
lightning in his hands. Tesla’s abstruse, esoteric electric technology
is best interpreted by experts in quantum physics and scaler
electromagnetics.


In his old age, forgotten and penniless, Tesla was murdered by
agents of the U.S. government in a seedy Manhattan hotel room, his
papers confiscated and disappeared by the FBI. Tesla’s technology
continues to be undisclosed to the public and instead is directed into
black projects, like the Philadelphia Experiment, and HAARP.


Antigravitic UFOs are Tesla technology, as are the
quantum-vacuum, zero-point energy generators that drive them. Tesla’s
technology has brought us the Tesla Scaler Potentizer, the Teslar
wristwatch, and the Tesla electric sportscar. It was Tesla’s magnifying
transmifrer that caused the devastating Tunguska explosion of 1908. A
contemporary black-project version underground in Canada accidentally
brought about the East Coast blackout of 2003.


The preceding will pass as intelligent Tesla-speak on late-night talk
radio, on the internet, and at cocktail parties. The italics above
contain some direct quotations from the literature: other examples are
more periphrastic: all are consistent with the idiom of the Tesla
Mystique.

The Mystique sentimentalizes, romanticizes, and mystifies the memory
of Nikola Tesla. The Mystique is determined to make Tesla awesome,
fantastic, and beyond comprehension. The Mystique is an intellectual
fashion wave that distorts biography, history, and science. It is a
vogue that has been embraced by fringe media and dabbled wrth by mass
media. The Mystique is taking root in the culture as official truth. The
Mystique has no critics.
The Mystique must make Tesla a paragon of character in all directions. For example:

Tesla, the Humanitarian


The sentimentalized Tesla becomes the humanitarian idealist fighting
the establishment for the benefit of human society. Contrary to the
Mystique, Tesla was above all an engineer. Engineering was his
education, his consuming passion, his daily practice. Tesla the engineer
incidentally might have hoped that his inventions would advance society
toward peace, convenience, comfort, and a more efficient use of human
energy. Incidentally.

Tesla was indeed an idealist. His idealistic passion was that of the
engineer. He insisted that machine possibilities be carried to their
ultimate, logical, evolutionary conclusions. He had an incorrigible
respect for his own inventive instincts. Let’s respect Tesla for all of
that in his character. Is it not enough? But the Mystique requires a
saintly paragon.

<blockquote>“The Mystique would give us a
liberal-humanitarian Tesla, politically
correct according to the modern etiquette.”

</blockquote>
Tesla’s inventing pushed forward relentlessly, sometimes oblivious to
ruling-system interests. That is heroic. Tesla’s dream for the ultimate
realiiation of his wireless was a “World System”. His ill-fated tower
at Wardencliff (near Shoreham, Long Island) was to be the prototype
magnifying transmitter for a global communications network. It was to
propagate both broadcast and point-to-point wireless, including
telephone, telegraph, stock tickers, teletype, even FAX, as well as
voice and music on a global scale, a monopolist’s dream.

The
Wardencliff magnifying transmitter also may have had the potential to
be a utility that could propagate electric power wirelessly through the
earth to industry and homes in the area. But this potential is not
pushed in the “World System” brochure which was published to promote the
project.

Did Tesla advertise this wireless-power capabilitly to his financier- J.P. Morgan?
Did a humanitarian Tesla threaten capitalism with free electric power,
and thus drive Morgan to halt the project, as the Mystique would have us
believe?

Not necessarily. The project’s formidable telecommunications
capability in itself may have been enough to induce Morgan to kill
Wardencliff. Tesla’s grandoise dream would have taken radio right off
the bat into a global centralization not quite achievable even today. No
multinational institutional structure, corporate or governmental,
existed at the time upon which such a svstem could have been founded. At
the turn of the century the J.P. Morgans might have been dreaming
globalistically, but it would be thirty years before the moguls could
establish radio networks on a national scale.

The Mystique would give us a liberal-humanitarian Tesla, politically
correct according to the modern etiquette. Unfortunately, he does not
fit the template. Pure technologists like Tesla tend toward a
mechanistic social view. To Tesla, human society was a machine, and it
needed perfecting. Tesla saw his World System as a civilizing force. He
wrote, “It will be very efficient in enlightening the masses,
particularly in uncivilized countries and less accessible regions.”

What did Tesla mean by “civilization?” He said, “No community can
exist and prosper without rigid discipline.” He said, “Law and order
absolutely require the maintenance of organized force.” Tesla, a
believer in organized military force, invented weapons of war (robotic
boats and submarines, death rays, etc.) which he tried to sell to the US
Navy and to the Department of War.

The Mystique would make Tesla a pacifist, because the inventor
idealized a mechanized, automated, robotic warfare which would replace
human participants entirely with machines (a misunderstanding of the
institution of war, which depends upon human destruction and terror).
Tesla foresaw weapons of mass destruction and the possibility of a
lasting world peace based on mutually-assured-destruction, but this is a
Kissinger pacifism.

Tesla, the inventor of wireless
and remote control, foresaw the “teleautomatic” warfare of today in
which robotic Predator aircraft, controlled from a bunker in Nevada,
deliver bombs and missiles upon Afghanistan. Sorry, but if we credit
Tesla with remote control, this insidious connection can be made.

Tesla, the purist engineer, advocated a social engineering that
included eugenic cleansing. He said government “should prevent the
breeding of the unfit by sterilization and the deliberate guidance of
the mating instinct.”

Humanitarian or totalitarian? You decide.

Tesla, the Genius


Granted, if the word genius has any meaning, it would apply to a Nikola Tesla.
The issue is, how much meaning can any word have when it becomes
cliché? When you utter “Tesla” in conversation, if vou don’t hear “who?”
you will get back “genius” within five seconds. Try it.

Tesla could visualize machines working in his head! But can’t any mechanical thinker? Yet one hears this all the time.

Is
there a Tesla biographv with a title that has in it no “genius” or
variation thereof? A magazine journalist of the l940s, John O’Neill,
authored a panegyric called Prodigal Genius (1946),
which has become institutionalized as the standard. O’Neill’s
enthusiasm may have been genuine, his biography eloquent and respectably
researched, but his spin is an echo of the newspaper hype of Tesla’s
heyday. O’Neal’s biography (still reprinted today) set precedent for the
obligatory promotional idiom that permeates almost all of Tesla
biography as well as almost all other discourse on the man and his work.

“Tesla, the great mathematical and physics genius, came up with an idea called zero-point energy,” quacks Michio Kaku. the string theorist, who has been declared a genius himself.

<blockquote>“Would the electrical age ever
have happened without Nikola Tesla?
Perish the thought, says the Mystique.”

</blockquote>
In his heyday, Tesla was exploited as the poster-boy for the emerging
electric-power utility industry that was exploiting his AC inventions.
Far from obscure, Tesla circa 1900 was as famous as Thomas Edison.
The press romanced a genius Tesla to the public in the process of
promoting this industry, which would develop into the omnipotent
monopolies of Samuel Insull, the modern grid, and Enron. Of course,
later, the media would turn on their pet genius and try to render him
invisible, limiting his exposure to an annual birthday press conference.

The Tesla brand was used by the system and then abruptly disposed.
But the brand has seen a revival today in various products, including
the Tesla sportscar (which does have a plausible claim in that today’s
electric cars use AC motors derived from Tesla’s).

Would the modern electrical age never have happened without Nikola
Tesla? Perish the thought, says the Mystique. Tesla’s
alternating-current meshed with the needs of an industrial system which
could not have expanded nationally into today’s expansive grid on
Edison’s puny direct- current system. But it’s arguable that the
alternators, motors, and transformers which the system needed in order
to progress might have been invented by one or more “geniuses” other
than Tesla. The Mystique shudders at the thought.

Tesla inherited a pre-modernist physics that allowed him exceptional
latitude for exploring technological possibility, which may be one
reason modernists, in their envy, feel they must ostracize him from
humanity as a special case, a genius. Some differentiate Tesla as so
exceptional that he must have come from another planet.

The mad-scientist cliché is another instance of the
differentiated, special-case Tesla. That genius Tesla was so weird,
possibly insane. The scary spark streamers in horror films issue from
the coils of that mad scientist, Tesla. Biographers dwell on the
eccentricities of their genius: the hand-washing, the stack of napkins
at Delmonico’s, the refusal to shake hands. Wrapping Tesla in cliche’ is
a way not to see him.

Genius cliche’ aside, can we responsibly describe Tesla as having
exceptional insight, that he was a sensitive, meaning one who has
retained the original insight into nature of the child? That is
certainly supportable when argued from the borderland by a Gerry Vassilatos.

One work that provides relief from the pervasive genius cliché (although the title does have that ring) is Enigma Fantastique by W. Gordon Allen (Health Research) The book parallels Tesla’s life with that of Rudolf Steiner.
It was Tesla’s distinctive education that made him special, says Allen.
Jesuit instructors played apart, as did various mystical schools
circulating in Eastern Europe when Tesla studied at Gruz. These stressed
an unusual self-discipline of both mind and body, and the development
of powers of rigorous self-application. Tesla’s distinctive strengths
are these. The genius sentimentality is a disfavor to Tesla and to the
concept of human potential in general.


Tesla, the Victim


The victim cliché dovetails with the genius one, and it feeds upon
inventors (as it does writers, musicians, and artists). Thus the
Mystique would have our genius dying in poverty. His death by murder is
sometimes in the script (by government agents), and the myth has all of
his work stolen and suppressed.

It’s true that, after being dumped by J.P. Morgan, Tesla suffered
economic humiliations. For example, there is evidence that he was forced
to pawn his interest in Wardencliff to the Waldorf Hotel in an attempt
to cover his debt. But the Mystique fails to appreciate that Tesla died
at age 87 of natural causes, not in poverty, but in his rooms at the New
Yorker, a commodious midtown hotel, which is not quite the Waldorf but a
nice situation for a senior citizen, being a little city unto itself
with restaurants, shops, and services, (a nifty habitat, testifies this
writer, who stayed at the New Yorker more than once in his college days,
fifteen years after Tesla’s death). The New Yorker Hotel was a very
decent place for a venerable inventor to live out his last days.

The Mystique celebrates Tesla as the Serbian immigrant who made good,
but culturally the cosmopolitan Tesla over the years had become a New
Yorker.

Tesla’s papers and belongings at the Hotel New Yorker indeed were
confiscated by the government, not by the FBI, but by a department that
once existed within Immigration called the Division of Alien Property.
It may be true that many of Tesla’s New Yorker notes got disappeared,
and we may yearn to see them, but it is a distortion to dwell
lugubriously on this, for we have so much of Tesla’s technology raw – in
a hundred or so US patents in print for years and now easily accessed
on the Internet. Also in printed volumes have been Tesla’s collected
Lectures, Patents, Articles and a rich and copious document on radio
technology called Colorado Springs Notes. Tesla, a gifted writer, wrote
his own little autobiography called My Inventions. This writer has edited and published Tesla’s The True Wireless.

Consider also all the material unearthed by Leland Anderson, John Ratzlaff, Gerry Vassilatos
and others. Vassilatos mined Tesla’s notes in archives found in the
annex of the New York Central Library. Biographer Marc Seiffer mined the
National Archives in Washington, DC, and in the Tesla Museum in
Belgrade. By no means has the available wealth of Tesla material been
totally explored and digested. Those who are demanding government
“disclosure” of free energy and antigravitics, have thev exhausted the
government’s open patent archives? Also, a lot of accessible Tesla has
been ignored because it is just too nonconforming and deep.

“How many who have ventured into the
uncertain profession of inventing can
claim such good fortune?”


Many accounts tell of Tesla being the victim, not just of J.P.
Morgan., but also of George Westinghouse. It’s true that Westinghouse
signed that dollar-per-horsepower contract with Tesla, from which he
might have made millions in royalties on the alternators, motors, and
transformers Westinghouse manufactured. It is true that Westinghouse
tore up that generous contract. But it is generally unappreciated that
J.P. Morgan was standing behind Westinghouse with a pistol to his back,
so to speak, for Morgan then was financing Westinghouse, as he financed
Tesla, Edison, and other US industrial pioneers. J.P. Morgan was the
banking link between New York and the London House of Morgan. Such
pipelines of capital from Europe drove the US industrial revolution.

It is true that Tesla’s later work invited suppression, but so many
of his inventions did make it into patent. The system tried to delete
the Tesla name, but it nevertheless persistently did live on,
underground, floating on the inventor’s former fame, until resurrected
in the 1980′s, albeit unofficially, and Tesla’s fame has been growing
ever since.

Victim? How many who have ventured into the uncertain profession of
inventing can claim such good fortune? Given the fate of inventors
generally, Tesla, the victim, fared very well. Compare the innumerable
inventors whose work goes forever unknown, including so many who did
make it into patent, whom you might run across in a subject search, find
just as clever as that genius Nikola Tesla, but who will remain forever
in obscurity never to be celebrated by any mystique.

The Philadelphia Experiment and Other Folklore


Did Tesla have anything to do with an item of folklore called “The
Philadelphia Experiment?” This sci-fi fantasy, widely circulated as
serious history, tells of a Navy experiment in making warships
invisible. The experiment went haywire, goes the story, dematerializing a
vessel in Philadelphia only to have it rematerialize, crew and all, in
Norfolk. The Philadelphia Experiment has become a major fixture in the
Tesla Mystique. “Tesla technology” is vaguely imputed to the phenomenon,
and the story (evidently a tavern yarn that got into book and out of
control) has Tesla on board as a technical participant.

The story is set in the year 1944. However, Tesla died in 1943
(January). A review by the Department of Naval Research found no
evidence to support the tale, and an independent military historian has
searched in vain in all imaginable Naval records for any clue that would
corroborate this incredible event (see footnote).

Does Tesla’s peculiar
radio technology really have anything to do with another govemment
experiment called HAARP? This notorious black project indeed exists on
some acrmge in Alaska and is indeed an experimental project in radio,
which Tesla invented. But Tesla’s radio is longwave, and HAARP is
shortwave, a band of frequencies (3 – 30 megacycles) that Tesla may have
never explored and that he assumed were relatively ineffective compared
to the low-frequency band (under 500 kilocycles). Also HAARP’s alleged
experiment is said to be the stimulating and heating of an ionosphere, which Tesla insisted does not exist and would have absolutely no effect on radio propagation if it did (The True Wireless).

That a Siberian forest near Tungusta rvas leveled in 1908 by a
15-kiloton blast from Tesla’s magnifying transmitter sited at the
opposite side of the earth is a bizarre rumor that will not die. Never
mind that Tesla at this time had no magnifying transmitter to play with,
assuming this machine could conceivably have any such power.

That a super-size Tesla coil secreted underground in Canada
accidentally created the summer 2003 East Coast electric-grid blackout
is a story that played on Art Bell one night but never gained traction.

<blockquote>“Patents may be the only sound footing
in the mythic world of Tesla.”

</blockquote>
UFOs, antigravity? Both are associated with Tesla. But there are just
a few speculative notes, and his few aircraft patents use conventional
air-flow lift. Some antigravity experimenters employ the Tesla-coil as a
high-voltage power supply. Some UFO researchers speculate that flying
saucers use dual out-of-phase Tesla coils in the levitation drive.

Compounding the Tesla Mystique is the inventor’s anticipation of
technologies unknown to the general public until the 1960′s, like fluidics, cryogenics, and computer logic.
That Tesla is original and has priority in these arts is assumed by
enthusiasts, but confirmation would require extensive searches among
patents filed by other inventors of the period. So much innovation gets
lost in the patent archives.

Tesla is celebrated for an interesting electric-ray device which he
introduced to the press as a death ray. He explored this clever vacuum
invention in laboratory prototypes, and drawings exist in the
literature, but he never put it into patent. Because of one cavalier
utterance by Tesla at a birthday press conference, the death ray was
sensationalized by the media and given disproportionate prominence
compared to many other newsworthy Tesla inventions that did get into
patent but which the press ignored. All of Tesla’s other fascinating
work in electric-ray technology is generally ignored and unappreciated
even today.

So much fantasy, folklore, and disinformation swim around Tesla that a
writer venturing into these waters has difficulty finding any secure
footing. This writer, had the good fortune of first encountering Tesla
solely in patents (having stumbled upon a complete set that someone had
photocopied at the National Archives, prior to these becoming available
in book). Surveying the field, even as the literature was developed back
then in the early eighties, this writer soon concluded that the patents
may be the only sound footing in the slippery mythic world of Tesla.

It’s a good idea for any writer on Tesla to ground himself in some
hands-on experimental Tesla circuit-building projects, such as the Tesla
coil, before he claims to know his subject. Such grounding can help
protect a writer from being consumed by the Mystique. To focus on
Tesla’s life instead of on his work opens a door into the Mystique, and a
special objectivity and discipline is required. It may be safer to
start with the technology and work outward. Almost all of contemporary
biography has been hopelessly infected by the Mystique.

What Tesla Really Did


These
are the contributions of Tesla to the technology of civlization, to the
patent archives, to knowledge: Tesla invented the 60-cycle AC power
system that runs civilization today, the dynamos, transformers, motors,
regulators and arc lamps. This technology established, along with his
own wealth and fame, Tesla went on inventing. A turning point was 1891,
when Tesla applied for patent 462,418, a Method and Apparatus for
Electrical Conversion and Distribution. His first high-frequency
lighting patent, the system was powered by a spark-gap oscillator like
that which would drive his Tesla coil. In 1891 began a stream of
inventing that produced the Tesla coil, radical non-filament lighting
devices, electrotherapy, the magnifying transmitter, wireless power, and
radio.

Although much of Tesla’s high-frequency work got into patent, most
never went into manufacture, and some which did, like radio, did so
under another’s name, like Marconi’s. (Tesla’s priority in radio, after
decades of litigation, was finally decided by the US Supreme Court in
1944.)

Few of Tesla’s explorations into ray technology got into patent, and
this third phase of his experimental life is under-documented
considering its implications. (See the work of Gerry Vassilatos, if you can find it.)

Tesla’s past includes this misty period in Canada in the 1930′s which
may have included accomplishments unsung. A reader in rural Quebec, a
ham, wrote to me that locals talk of Tesla constructing a practical
wireless utility that successfully transrnitted power for 70 miles from
Chambord to LaTuque.

Free energy? Tesla did patent a fundamental space-energy-receiver
concept in 1901, Patent 685,957. A space-energy receiver collects
ambient energy and converts it to a practical electric output. A very
crude space-energy receiver is the solar-electric panel. That Tesla ever
pursued space-energy into any working prototlpes is very likely but
difficult to document.

Tesla’s nephew wrote an account of a 1931 drive in his uncle’s
customized Pierce Arrow, which was powered by an 80 hp AC electric motor
that was apparently supplied, not by any massive battery-pack, but by a
space-energy receiver. Consisting of a circuit having twelve rectifier
vacuum tubes, operating cold-cathode, in a box resembling a radio
receiver and measuring about 24 by 12 by 6 inches, the device powered
the heavy vehicle for a 50-mile drive at speeds of up to 90 mph. Now
this would be the ultimate electric vehicle. As he drove, Tesla boasted
to his nephew that his free-energy device could supply the electrical
needs of any household with power to spare. Hopefully, the story is
true, but there is only this one account to go by. It belongs to a
period of Tesla’s life about which not much is known.

<blockquote>“Space energy is evident in a lightning bolt,
but it is a most taboo truth.”

</blockquote>
Lurking perhaps in Tesla’s confiscated notes are drawings of
practical table-top space-energy power plants. Subsequent inventors have
demonstrated similar successful devices (Morey, Plauson, Coler,
Hendershot, Stubblefield) but they have received more punishment than
reward for their efforts.

Tesla said, “Electric power is everywhere present in unlimited
quantities and can drive the world’s machinery without the need for
coal, oil, gas, or any other fuel.” This truth is a most taboo truth,
but it is evident in a lightning bolt (and consider especially the
phenomenon of above-cloud lightning).

It’s fashionable to say that the conversion technology required to
put free energy into practice is way off in the future or locked up in
government files awaiting “disclosure.” Yes, but only if you ignore all
of the archived patents and other available literature, which in the
aggregate would supply more than enough knowledge to go to the
developmental workbench.

If it is true, as Tesla said, that electric energy is everywhere
present and can be harnessed for practical use, then energy-scarcity
must be all myth. Scarcity, one could argue, is contrived and
advertised, not on the basis of any known scientific truth, but upon
scientific fictions propagated in order to better control the
population. Which is to say that the entire world has been vaccinated
wrth a conviction that electric energy is a finite, limited, esoteric
resource that must be centrally generated, conserved, controlled, and
paid for by the kilowatt hour.

Follow the logic, and you can argue that contrived scarcity is the
ruling system’s rule in respect to all energy sources, ether-electric,
petroleum, or whatever. Tesla ran afoul of this rule of rules.


The Quantum Tesla


It was inevitable that quantum, which is buzz-word number one in
fashionable scientific parlance, would attach itself to buzz-word number
two, Tesla. Quantum true-believers are uneasy with Tesla, and think it
necessary to invest a huge volume of verbiage and intellectual energy in
a misguided effort to reconcile Tesla’s electrics with modern quantum
theory. Tesla’s science was premodern, unfortunately, so the quantums
must “interpret” Tesla in “correct” modernist terms.

<blockquote>“There is no such thing as an electron.”
</blockquote>
Tesla took for granted a science that had served research faithfully
for at least 150 years. This Victorian inventor (who was “a man out of
time,” according to the Mystique) had no respect for the quantum theory
that was becoming fashionable in his own lifetime. Nor did Tesla have
any good words for Einstein’s relativity, which he called “A massive
deception wrapped in a beautiful mathematical cloak.” Nevertheless,
quantum interpreters like to mix in some Einstein with their Tesla. From
the same Einsteinian fashion that gives us time-warps and warp-speed
comes the likes of: “One way to visualize a Tesla scaler wave is to
regard it a pure oscillation of time itself.” What a turn-off is this
jargon to the innocent who encounters it in a search for some real
knowledge of Tesla technology!

A quantum Tesla? “There is no such thing as an electron,” said Tesla.
That item of quantum vocabulary, “electron”, is not to be found
anywhere in his writings. Somebody should print this quotation on tee
shirts and conduct a campaign to stamp out the fashion that requires
such excruciating utterances as: “A Tesla coil is a quantum action
device … if the phase of a split quantum particle is changed, its
conjugate partner instantly knows …”

Go all the way with the quantum-particle-electron and you’ll eventually get to the glib, buzzy Dr. Kaku,
who has his electrons “darting in and out of parallel universes.”
(Admit this language into your mind as meaning, and it is your loss.)

Tesla was not a theoretical physicist. Although his writings include
some very articulate and suggestive musings in both physics and
metaphysics, he asserted no systematic dogma. This is unfortunate,
because it left a vacuum to be filled later by quantum-educated Tesla
enthusiasts who take Einstein, Star Trek, and Kaku for granted. It
becomes another way of suppressing Tesla, by co-option, by obfuscation.

<blockquote>“A tenuity beyond perception.”
</blockquote>
Tesla thought science took a wrong turn when it adopted the quantum
and Einsteinian. Premodern science is qualitative. Modern science is
quantitative. It materializes the immaterial universe, particle-izes it,
counts it, mathematizes it, while discounting the qualitative, the
immaterial, the subtle, the etheric, the cosmic, the poetic. You may be
quantum and Einsteinian, but it is an error to impute any of this
constrictive dogma to the expansive, visionary Nikola Tesla.

Tesla came in on the ground floor of experimental particle physics
with his exploration of x-rays (co-incident with Roentgen’s
explorations). X-rays, he once observed, were “streams of matter.” The
vocabulary of particle physics he otherwise avoids. The materialistic
philosophy of quantum, which promises to find the universe in a quark,
would be completely alien to Tesla’s cosmic view, in which the ether is
the universal continuum, immaterial, a field permeating all of matter
and all of space, “a tenuity beyond perception.”

Tesla was not straining for a “unified field.” He inherited the
concept. The pervasive universal etheric continuum is the medium of all
electric phenomena. Charge, potential, polarity, conduction: all can be
understood as instances of some stress, or disequilibrium, in the
continuum of the ether. Free energy for Tesla would be derived from a
disturbed spontaneously energetic continuum, the taboo ether.

Ether theory is unbound by the sacrosanct speed-of-light C-constant
of Plank and Einstein, which is used to preclude the possibility of
instant action. Ether theory allows for phenomena at “superluminal”
velocity. That is, a disturbance of the ether’s equilibrium at one point
can create an instantaneous corresponding disturbance elsewhere, like
the action of a mechanical lever.

Quantum theory fragmented the continuum into particles, but physics
had to call in the clever Dr. Kaku to tie it all back together with
“strings.”

A tenuity beyond perception? Way too tenuous, say the modernists, who
must materialize this mystery into “a quantum sea of point particles in
motion.” This from Moray King, who located his particle motion at a
“zero point,” hence “zero-point energy,” or ZPE. It’s amazing how this
zippy vocabulary has caught on. Just don’t ask its users to define their
terms. Some closet etherists will cloak their theoretical utterances in
quantum-speak in order to pass.

Consider the following musing from Tesla regarding the mysterious
properties of the human eye: “A single ray of light from a distant star
falling upon the eye of a tyrant in bygone times, may have changed the
destiny of nations, may have transformed the surface of the globe, so
intricate, so inconceivably complex are the processes of nature.” Such
an utterance from a proper modern academic is inconceivable. Horrors;
it’s almost astrology. However, to the premodernist mind, such
reflections were part of science.

Quantum-style interpreters like to mix Tesla with the modernist radio theory of Heinrich Hertz,
a theory which Tesla vehemently rejected. To Tesla, wireless was not a
light-like, radiation, which is reflective and refractive. Wireless
Tesla understood as “compressions and rarefactions of the ether,” an
ether disturbance, “like a wave … in the infinite ocean of the medium
which pervades all,” he said.

Neo-Herzian Tesla enthusiasts claim that, at Colorado Springs,
Tesla’s signals propagated by bouncing about inside of a resonant
“Schuman cavity,” presumed to exist between the earth and an ionosphere.
What ionosphere? Tesla declared there was no such thing, and, if such
existed, it would have no effect on wireless propagation. Tesla believed
the earth itself was a giant capacity that could be resonated, like the
terminal capacity on his Tesla coils.

Herzians and quantumists should at least apologize to Tesla when they
step all over his premodernist science in an attempt to reform it in
their own dull terms.

My quantum radiometer. A reader sent to me as a gift
a radiometer. (Thank you, Craig.) Tesla called the Crookes radiometer
the “most beautiful invention ever created” and a new step in motor
technology, “the jewel of motors.”

My gift radiometer is a nice little toy from Tedco, but the box copy,
written by a quantum true-believer, attributes the rotation to an
atomic heat phenomenon. The dark side of the vanes somehow gets more
warmth from the light, thus reacting with “freely moving particles of
air,” which are assumed to be residual in the vacuum and entirely
responsible for the motion imparted. Thus, “when the atoms strike the
dark vanes, they kick away at terrific speed,” smugly declares the box
copy.

So if this is a heat phenomenon, why do the vanes turn in the cold
light of my LED flashlight? And why do they rotate when I take my CB
transceiver hand-unit, hold the rubber-ducky aerial to the bulb, and key
up? Also the bulb fills with a mysterious milky luminescence, reminding
me of Crookes’s high-voltage vacuum-bulb experiments.

The
quantum mind cannot handle a dynamic vacuum and must throw in a few
residual atomic particles to get some action. Leave it to the quantum
believer to destroy a powerful mystery with some stupid materialistic
explanation. Also, the box copy says simple “radiometer”, giving no
credit anywhere to Sir William Crookes, a man whose rich premodernist
work has apparently been forgotten by quantum true-believers.

As an antidote, I dig up a 1996 article about the radiometer from
“The Journal of Borderland Sciences” which attributes rotation to an
energetic component of light and of electric rays that is black radiance.
Crookes observed the phenomenon in the mysterious dark spaces that
appeared in his electrified tubes and also in the spark streamers from
Tesla’s coils. The quantum believer must materialize dark radiance as
“dark matter” or “black holes.” The radiometer, like the electrified
Crookes tube, “was designed to peer into astral space beyond the
inertial walls,” says the Borderlands writer, who reports that Crookes
built a huge demonstration radiometer, electrified it with Tesla
currents, and inside one could actually see the dark space pushing the
vanes around, until speed resolved the rotor into a whirling darkness.

Etheric science is expansive, cosmic, metaphysical, spiritual, and
way more fun than quantum, which is myopic, submicroscopic,
matertalistic, atheistic, prosaic, and dull.

The challenge to the Tesla biographer is to transcend the great fog
of fashionable folklore obscuring his subject. The challenge to the
Tesla physicist is to transcend fashionable theory and to submerge
himself in Tesla’s physics, which, fashionable or not, is an occult
ether physics. To comprehend Tesla one must dare to cross over into the
fringe.


source:-
http://www.wakingtimes.com/2013/05/23/the-tesla-mystique/
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