39 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
39 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
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NIKOLA TESLA
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(1856 - 1943)
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______________________________________________________________________
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"Called a madman by someone, a genius by others, and an enigma by
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nearly everyone, Nikola Tesla was possibly the greatest inventor the
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world has ever known. He was, without doubt, a trail blazer who
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created astonishing, sometimes world-transforming, devices that often
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were virtually without theoretical precedent. It was Tesla who
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introduced us to the fundamentals of robotry, computers, and missile
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science and helped pave the way for such space-age technologies as
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satellites, microwaves, beam weapons, and nuclear fusion. Yet, Tesla
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still remains one of the least recognized scientific pioneers in
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history.
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Certainly he was one of the strangest of scientists-almost
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supernaturally gifted, erratic, flamboyant, and neurotic nearly to the
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point of madness. A dandy and popular man-about-town, he was admired
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by man as diverse as George Westinghouse and Mark Twain and adored by
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scores of society beauties. Yet his bewildering of compulsions and
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phobias extended from such mundane subject as food and clean linen to
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pearls and women's ears. He was fond of creating
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neighborhood-threatening electrical storms in his apartment laboratory
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and once nearly knocked down a tall building by attaching a mysterious
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"black box" to its side. (He claimed he could have destroyed the
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entire planet with a similar device.) And because he kept so few
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notes, to this day we can only guess at the details of many of the
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fantastic scientific projects that occupied his fevered intellect."
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Adapted from the: "Man out of time" by Margaret Cheney
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______________________________________________________________________
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lpv@umiacs.umd.edu
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