Others on Tesla
B.A. Behrend
- Were we to seize and eliminate from our industrial world the
results of Mr. Tesla's work, the wheels of industry would cease to turn, our
electric cars and trains would stop, our towns would be dark, our mills
would be dead and idle. Yes, so far reaching is his work that it has become
the warp and woof of industry... His name marks an epoch in the advance of
electrical science. From that work has sprung a revolution...
W.W. Rice Jr.
- From his work followed the great work of Röntgen, who discovered
the Röntgen rays, and all that work which has been carried on throughout the
world in following years by J.J. Thomson and others, which has really led to
the conception of modern physics. His work... antedated that of Marconi and
formed the basis of wireless telegraphy... and so on throughout all branches
of science and engineering we find... important evidence of what Tesla has
contributed...
I.C.M. Brentano
- There are three aspects of Tesla's work which particularly deserve
our admiration: The importance of the achievements in themselves, as judged
by their practical bearing; the logical clearness and purity of thought,
with which the arguments are pursued and new results obtained; the vision
and the inspiration, I should almost say the courage, of seeing remote
things far ahead and so opening up new avenues to mankind.
E.F.W. Alexanderson
- In almost every step of progress in electrical power engineering,
as well as in radio, we can trace the spark of thought back to Nikola Tesla.
There are few indeed who in their lifetime see realization of such a
far-flung imagination.
Louis Cohen
- In reading Tesla's work one is constantly struck by his many
suggestions which have anticipated later developments in the radio
art.
Gano Dunn
- Prolific inventor, who solved the greatest problem in electrical
engineering of his time, and gave to the world the polyphase motor and
system of distribution, revolutionizing the power art and founding its
phenomenal development. My contact as your assistant at the historic
Columbia University high frequency lecture and afterward has left an
indelible impression and inspiration which has influenced my life.
Chauncey McGovern
- Fancy yourself seated in a large, well-lighted room, with
mountains of curious-looking machinery on all sides. A tall, thin young man
walks up to you, and by merely snapping his fingers creates instantaneously
a ball of leaping red flame, and holds it calmly in his hands. As you gaze
you are surprised to see it does not burn his fingers. He lets it fall upon
his clothing, on his hair, into your lap, and, finally, puts the ball of
flame into a wooden box. You are amazed to see that nowhere does the flame
leave the slightest trace, and you rub your eyes to make sure you are not
asleep.
Peter II Karadjordjevic (King of Yugoslavia)
- In his diaries (A King's Heritage), under date July 8,
1942, the young Peter II writes: "I visited Dr. Nicola Tesla, the
world-famous Yugoslav-American scientist, in his apartment in the Hotel New
Yorker. After I had greeted him the aged scientist said: `It is my greatest
honor. I am glad you are in your youth, and I am content that you will be a
great ruler. I believe I will live until you come back to a free Yugoslavia.
From your father you have received his last words: `Guard Yugoslavia.' I am
proud to be a Serbian and a Yugoslav. Our people cannot perish. Preserve the
unity of all Yugoslavs - the Serbs, the Croats, and Slovenes.'"
Adopted from "Tesla: man out of time", by Margaret
Cheney, 1981.
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