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Tesla is an unusual historical figure, living across cultures, in a period of quick technological transformation, a mix of engineer, scientist and trickster. The biography conveys the whole context and you are drawn into this budding world of inventions and patents which Tesla wove into his being naturally, but never quite fully benefited from. He liked jumping from projects and ideas that could be created quickly to fantastic creations that might affect the whole planet's magnetic field. The personality of the inventor is that of a quirky slightly capricious genius: one that revels in his view of the world even as the actual social mechanics take advantage of him and "steal" his inventions. But the real magical genius of Tesla is about having a picture of how electromagnetism works at an intuitive level, able to bend and twist these dynamics to create new tools. The book conveys the full opportunity and tragedy of the character's life, his desire to ultimately be recognised as the master of E&M, while many see him as a strange magician, a showoff, an antisocial grump.
 
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yates9 | 8 andere besprekingen | Feb 28, 2024 |
nonfiction, famous-persons, inventions, inventors, historical-figures, historical-places-events, historical-research, cultural-heritage, 19th-century, 20th-century, 21st-century, visionary, biography*****

Tesla was a genius inventor more than a century ahead of his time who worked on many projects that he wanted to create an atmosphere where there was no more war. He worked on his projects through numerous European wars including The Great War and WW2. His projects include automatons, binary code, mixed radio frequencies, and remote control. Millennials have a smaller sense of wonder about many of his visionary projects because they have no idea how we managed to survive with transistor radios, landlines, no TV or garage door remotes. And some of the information has only been declassified in the last decade. There are many high-profile money people showcased as his backers and even a nod to Hedy Lamarr, the actress/inventor. While the aspect of his naval/military war contributions comprises only a part of the book, I found it more than interesting!
I requested and received a free e-book copy from Kensington Books/Citadel via NetGalley. Thank you!
 
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jetangen4571 | Aug 15, 2022 |
Wizard: Life and Times of Nikola Tesla Audiobook
 
I listened to this in my vehicle over many weeks. I have always been fascinated by Nicola Tesla and also aware that he has been "cultified" to a great extent and that some of his biographies are questionable in terms of veracity.
 
This biography claims to be the most truthful it terms of the author having accessed much of the original material available and not having relied on previous biographers. I guess in this way some of the myths about Mr Tesla get debunked along the way.
 
He did invent wireless as we know it and Marconi's patent was overturned by the US Supreme Court in 1943 thereby acknowledging Tesla as the inventor of wireless. Notwithstanding that, I was brought up with the belief that Marconi was the man. Just goes to show that a well repeated lie beats the truth hands down on most days.
 
This biography is nothing if not comprehensive. It pretty much starts at the beginning and ends at the end and in between those points not many stones are left unturned in the attempt to portray this genius. Does it succeed? Well, I'd have to say yes to that. Did I enjoy it? Maybe, it was very long and very repetitive in places and sometimes the format got in the way of the material.
 
But you don't pick up a biography for entertainment so the criteria for review are somewhat different. It is a well researched and put together piece of work. I don't think the author is impartial, I think he is a complete fan of Mr Tesla and has had to temper his enthusiasm in places. I think being a fan of the subject is not a bad thing in a biographer.
 
There were a couple of bits that I struggled with, the author's Freudian analysis of Tesla's celibacy stretched my credibility and patience but I feel curmudgeonly in saying that because that piece of criticism is like saying that there was a speck of dust on the cover. If you want to know more about Nicola Tesla this is the book.
 
He also covers the conspiracy theorists' subject of his "missing papers" and the "death ray".
 
I guess I could list all the things that we owe to Nicola Tesla, like our AC power system that is used globally and say that he didn't just come up with the idea of how to make AC power but he presented all of it complete in one go, the generation, distribuition and deployment. And that in the face of mathematicians with "conclusive" proof that AC electricity was an impossibility. That IBM, when patenting the ideas and technology in their mainframe computer, found that they could not take out some patents because Nicola Tesla had already patented the ideas 50 years earlier.
 
The man was a genius, flawed maybe but a genius nonetheless and this book will illuminate and illustrate that completely.
 
 
 
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Ken-Me-Old-Mate | 8 andere besprekingen | Sep 24, 2020 |
The biography of Nikola Tesla. I wish someone would tell me why we learn about Thomas Edison in school, but not Nikola Tesla. NOTHING we have in our current society would be possible without the inventions and research this great man did. He is responsible for AC current which powers virtually every home and business in the world. Edison was in business making DC current and fighting a battle with Tesla (which Edison lost, thankfully) to have his vastly inferior form of electricity (because DC voltage and current drop over distance and can't be distributed for more than a few miles from where it is generated, while AC current can go for hundreds of miles). Tesla invented the florescent light (Edison did incandescent). Tesla invented remote control boats and vehicles. Tesla invented the oscillators which are the basis of radio transmission which Marconi pirated illegally and took the credit for (this was proven in court and Tesla was vindicated as the true inventor of radio transmission). These are but the tip of the iceberg. Tesla is without any doubt the greatest inventor in the history of mankind. He was also pretty flakey and had a huge ego and an inability to make sound financial decisions, but that does not take away from the greatness of his intellect and ability to see the potential of things that others had never given any thought to. The book is well written, though be aware that by it's nature, it does deal with science and inventions which the average person may be unaware of. I did not have any problem following most of the content.
 
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JohnKaess | 8 andere besprekingen | Jul 23, 2020 |
This is a biography of Nicola Tesla, the late 19th, early 20th century inventor, widely credited with invention of the multi-phase alternating current motor, among many other things. He is perhaps best known for his sometimes contentious rivalry with the far more celebrated contemporary, Thomas Edison. In fact, Edison who invented the mono-filament light bulb, was a champion of utilizing direct current electricity. Tesla certainly won that round.

This biography follows the life of Tesla in a purely chronological manner, from his birth in Eastern Europe through his ultimate death, eighty-six years later in the United States. It touches upon many of his revolutionary ideas, along with sometimes fascinating interaction with the preeminent scientists and theoreticians of the era. Harnessing electricity and radio waves were revolutionary pursuits, undertaken by many of brightest minds of Tesla’s generation.

Patents flew fast and furious and lawsuits filled the courthouses with contesting claims of priority. Tesla has become almost a mythical figure, as one whose ideas were behind many of the most groundbreaking discoveries of the era, yet failing to achieve recognition or reward, in comparison to others such as Edison and Marconi. Much of this was his fault, due to poor business decisions and an inability or refusal to translate most of his theories and inventions into practical application.

The book itself contains quite a bit of very enlightening personal and historical information regarding Tesla and his contemporaries, and while it frequently ventures into the realm of hagiography, not excessively so in comparison with most biographies. My biggest complaint lies in the amount of technical information provided to the readers. Given the fact that probably less than 0.1% of readers are electrical engineers, I found the level of technical specificity to be somewhat excessive. Also, the author provides frequent quack psychological analysis that is in no way helpful.

From the standpoint of biographies, this is pretty much a second-rate effort when compared to many others I have read. David McCollough would have done a much better job.
 
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santhony | 8 andere besprekingen | May 5, 2020 |
This book tells the story of Stephen Rosati who was falsely accused of murder in 1986. It really is astounding to think of what this family went through. Even with documentation to prove that Stephen was not even in the state of FL the year of the murder he was still arrested and it took 2 years to clear Stephen. It is deplorable that the justice system offers so little justice.
 
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jlsimon7 | Feb 26, 2016 |
I'm not sure if he was crazy or if all the electricity he ran through his body made him that way. He may have been a great inventor but a poor businessman. Tesla also enjoyed a lifestyle that did not fit the amount of money he brought in. He also seemed to have a tough time getting to the finish lines with projects. He had great dreams and hopes but never seemed to push them over the edge. Whether it was waning interest or the fact that the project lacked funds many inventions were still in development stage. This book was well researched and included lots of snippets of correspondence. This was an enjoyable read, and probably would have been more enjoyable if i knew more about electricity.
 
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JWarrenBenton | 8 andere besprekingen | Jan 4, 2016 |
I'm not sure if he was crazy or if all the electricity he ran through his body made him that way. He may have been a great inventor but a poor businessman. Tesla also enjoyed a lifestyle that did not fit the amount of money he brought in. He also seemed to have a tough time getting to the finish lines with projects. He had great dreams and hopes but never seemed to push them over the edge. Whether it was waning interest or the fact that the project lacked funds many inventions were still in development stage. This book was well researched and included lots of snippets of correspondence. This was an enjoyable read, and probably would have been more enjoyable if i knew more about electricity.
 
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JWarrenBenton | 8 andere besprekingen | Jan 4, 2016 |
This very long, very detailed biography of Nikola Tesla, a maverick scientist and inventor, one of the fathers of the modern electrical world, is difficult to recommend. The main problem is that style interferes with the big picture. I presume that this book is an expansion of a history of science academic PhD thesis - and it shows. Consequently, the voice is, in the main, dry, at times oddly sycophantic, and obsessed with naming names that usually mean nothing to the reader. Seifer talks of graphology and analysing Tesla's handwriting (pseudoscientific rubbish), and has various sections where he psychoanalyses Tesla, mainly based on Freud (also all rubbish). In contrast, he fails to use modern psychological language to describe Tesla's foibles (he was almost certainly suffering from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, but we have to infer this from the text, rather than hear the label).

These are minor compared to the two main faults, however. The first is such a detailed, comprehensive description of Tesla's life, that it's extremely difficult for the reader to get an overall sense of Tesla's accomplishments. Second, the author is obviously not scientifically literate, and has not even carried out the proper research to assess the validity of each of Tesla's ideas or proposed inventions. This admittedly is a tricky task for a character who was as much a showman as an inventor, and who spun so many lies about how far along his projects were that he probably at times believed in his own lies, and was at times very deluded about their chances of success and import. Yet at almost no time do we trust Seifer to guide us through this minefield, which is a huge shame. In the main, Seifer's strategy is simply to assume that because Tesla was such a great man, with a huge intellect, that everything he touched must have been genius quality (a far better strategy would have been to assume that Tesla had a few good ideas amidst many bad ones, and to have been sceptical of anything that didn't become a commercial success).

Consequently, we as readers not only have to see through the many lies of Tesla, but the many foibles of Seifer, to try to get a sense of Tesla the man and the inventor. It's clear that Tesla did transform the world, since his inventions enabled electricity to be efficiently generated and transported. But it's also clear that Tesla invested years in other inventions that would never work, and that he had a rather poor grasp of many features of physics. For instance he never accepted relativity, and believed even to the end that some particles could greatly surpass the speed of light.

I guess, despite all this, Seifer should be praised for giving enough of a sense of Tesla, for making us realise that his place in history should never, as he wished, be up there with Newton and the other greats. But he wasn't far off the far more famous Edison in accomplishments either, and so Tesla's at times awkward personality has done him no favours in how history has remembered him.
 
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RachDan | 8 andere besprekingen | May 23, 2014 |
-very good education in all aspects, but had problems - gambled and quit school.
-Interesting how the forefront of civilization changes, when he grew up in (present day) Croatia and Budapest (the Austro-Hungarian empire) in the 1850-80s, that was arguably among the most cutting-edge places in science, arts, etc.
-had to do business with his inventions, not only make them. Same thing with Edison, for whom he briefly worked. Maybe having to do that was not so bad?
-technology optimist. Worked on others to improve technology and progress so people could invent even more.
-so much resources put into patent dealings...
-said of Edison that with a little theory and learning he could have done much of what he did much quicker. Edison was man if trial and error.
-Realized finite resources. Believed in transferring energy through the ether. If managed could transfer energy from falls etc to where needed. From Niagara Falls.
-Turned increasingly eccentric. Claimed to be able to split the world in two with an oscillator generating the resonance of the earth, thereby creating eventually splitting it in two. But he did relate his ideas to science, and the author is perhaps too quick in dismissing as false those ideas and those of Newton and others on their time of making gold. First of all, at the time it may have been much less clear than now whether they were feasible, but even now we cannot claim to know them to be false. It may well be that one of the traits that do make great scientists great is an ability to entertain possibilities that seem far-fetched at first, but do so from a scientific viewpoint.
-Tesla’s ideas important for Marconi’s radio.
 
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ohernaes | 8 andere besprekingen | Feb 7, 2013 |
Alas, this is basically a work of pseudoscience. The author buys into pan-psychism, relativity rejection, ether theory, parapsychology, and astrology. The amateurishness of his off-the-wall physical theorizing betrays his lack of qualifications in physics.
 
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fpagan | Jul 30, 2009 |
I could write a book about the author's failings, but his archival research provides great material on the social connections and personal side of the man. There was no need for the repetitive, unconvincing psychoanalysis, handwriting analysis, or defenses against claims of his homosexuality. His personal involvement in the narrative is frequently distracting. I was never sure if the organization was chronological or thematic either. Not a good source for understanding the science, inventions or engineering (my impression was the author didn't understand himself but perhaps he didn't want to explain things from later knowledge?). A quick Wikipedia search with links to the patents and web page discussions was much better at helping me to understand the inventions themselves.
2 stem
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danrebo | 8 andere besprekingen | Nov 1, 2008 |
Toon 12 van 12