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328 pages, Paperback
First published May 22, 2018
"...That theme of being a man ahead of his time appeared again and again in the tributes. Tesla indeed had lived in flux. He was born during a lightning storm at the stroke of midnight, between today and tomorrow. He was raised a Serb into an Orthodox family in a region dominated by Croats and Roman Catholics. His father instilled religion while Tesla embraced science. This inventor craved isolation but could be a master showman. He enjoyed lavish living but walked away from lucrative contracts. He won the “War of the Currents” but died almost penniless and feeding pigeons. Tesla was one paradox after another.
Maybe we all are, but Tesla’s personality seemed based on paradox. One science writer concluded, “He was so far ahead of his contemporaries that his patents often expired before they could be put to practical use.”112
Another calculated that Tesla made at least five outstanding scientific discoveries—cosmic rays, artificial radioactivity, disintegrating beam of electrified particles, electron microscope, and X-rays—that others “rediscovered” up to forty years later and for which they then won Nobel Prizes.113
Speaking of Tesla’s visionary work, Major General J. O. Mauborgne, former chief signal officer for the U.S. Army, stated: “Those of us who grew up with the early wireless art and are familiar with his researches and contributions to science revere his memory as the greatest genius in the early wireless field.
He was so far ahead of his day in the concept of the transmission of intelligence through space that the world never fully realized that Tesla was the real inventor of wireless transmission and reception as well as many other wonderful developments.”