Talk:Nikola Tesla/Archive 2
This is an archive of past discussions about Nikola Tesla. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 |
Nikolai Tesla and his Earthquake Machine
What's this I hear about an earthquake machine? Can we put some information on this? IT SEEMS PRETTY DAMN IMPORTANT!
-G
->try searching for oscilators -> one of them caused that earthquake
Main Photograph
The photographed looks shopped. More to the point, it looks edited at the source. I think this may be an example of 1920's vainity photoshopping in action.
Year of death of Tesla's mother
In the Wikipedia's entry on Tesla there is a wrong data on the year of death of Tesla's mother. It was 1892, at the time of Tesla's only visit to Europe since he left for the US. This can be easily verified, in Tesla's autobiography or elsewhere.
The year stated in the Wikipedia entry is 1882. In my opinion, it would be very important to fix this error. Otherwise, congratulations for the good work.
quirks?
I've read about tesla in various places before and one of the most interesting things about him were his extreme alleged eccentricities, which don't seem to be mentioned here at all. Things like having to do everything in multiples of 3 and whatnot (I forget exactly what they were). Or maybe such quirks are false and a prank played by historians or himself- perhaps assisted by mark twain..
Synaesthesia? Asperger syndrome?
In a number of different places I've read that Tesla had synaesthesia, but I've not been able to find the source of such information. Could someone give a reference?
Tesla was one of the famous people mentioned in the book "Different like me: my book of autism heroes" by Jennifer Elder. I've not read the book myself. Is it worth mentioning that Tesla might have been on the autistic spectrum (along with many other great minds like Newton, Einstein etc)? OCD and synaesthesia seem to be associated with autism. I think Asperger syndrome could explain a lot about Tesla's life.
reverts
Can we stop this senseless pattern of reverting others' edits? Reverting people who fix spelling errors, correct grammar and make other uncontroversial changes is no way to build good faith amongst editors. If you disagree with part of an edit, revert that part if you must, but don't revert the whole thing wholesale. –Joke 15:04, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
- When you revert, it is not considered good form to revert other users' spelling corrections, link fixes, punctuation corrections and grammar and style corrections while pursuing your favorite hobby-horses. –Joke 03:34, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- I wish we could but apparently people think they have the power to do anything they want to an article without consensus. It's quite simple:
A) If you don't think Tesla's cat has relevance in this aricle, you can
a) remove it b) change it or give it relevance
do not
c) change it along with other parts of the article that you don't agree with.
72.144.150.233 08:50, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Please, stop changing edits. People who do that are
A) annoying.
If you don't like my part of my post, that's no reason to go and erase averything I've added. That's why I somtimes don't leave an edit summary.Dan
99% of the material in this article has already been reviewed by and accepted by the majority of editors on here. Now, we're getting massive changes and adding POV claims like "Tesla is also known for his ground breaking contribution to the radio, whose patented research in 1897 allowed Guglielmo Marconi to broadcast the first signal across the English Channel in 1899." While an editor is consistently removing sourced and relevant information in this article, such as a paragraph outlining the prototype of a loudspeaker invented by Tesla. 72.144.150.233 08:54, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- It is your responsibility when doing the reversions not to needlessly revert others' work. Frankly, I don't know anything about this Marconi sentence. Remove it if you find it offensive, and reinsert the loudspeaker. But as long as you keep doing these robotic reverts back to a version with spelling errors, poor grammar, mismatched parentheses, an overlong introduction and ambiguous links, I will continue to revert your changes. Why don't you try and compromise? –Joke 13:35, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Marconi used Tesla's research without giving Tesla credit. This is widely known historical fact known to any biographer of the man. The only problems that appear in the anon user's edit is that they sound sycophantic. No one can believe that something is pov when lines like
"It is of some interest to note that Tesla was reportedly born at the very stroke of midnight during a lightning storm, according to various biographies" or "In the United States, Tesla's fame rivaled that of any other inventor or scientist in history or in popular culture". and "he was widely respected as America's greatest electrical engineer." This sounds like something out of a fan club and does not constitute valid research. Finally, what is it with that pet cat? Guy Montag 06:06, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
- There, I have reinserted the stuff about the loudspeaker and removed the stuff about Marconi. I have almost surely annoyed someone else in doing so... –Joke 13:49, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Hi, Joke. Please make any edits you have to make on the original version, not on the one that was recently butchered and vandalized, including the removal of numerous sentences almost by random, plus the addition of weird sentences like "When Edison was a very old man and close to death, he said his biggest mistake was that he never respected Nikola Tesla or his work." and farfetched POVs like a change from "Tesla's theory is ignored by some researchers (and mainly disregarded by physicists)." to "disregarded by nearly all researchers" (which is untrue). For an example of random deletions:
the following was deleted by a user without posting any reason for why it was removed in talk:
- devices for charged particle beams
- methods for providing extremely low level of resistance to the passage of electrical current (predecessor to superconductivity)
Furtheremore, an entire paragraph was randomly removed from the intro, and several sentences were replaced by the nonsensical sentence "He was one of the pioneers of modern electrical engineering; however, due in large part to the unfavorable course of his competition and disputes with other inventors, such as Thomas Edison." 72.144.60.85 18:34, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- You really ought to pay attention. I removed the weird Edison sentence already. I am finding it hard not to see your behavior as willful obstinance. It is certainly true that Tesla's theory of gravity plays no role in modern physics – who else other than physicists (and perhaps historians of science) would study a theory of gravity? Why don't you look at the diffs yourself and fix the part that was butchered and vandalized. –Joke 18:55, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- Researchers and physicists are two different occupations last time I checked. Instead of reverting by random as you're doing, how about helping me improve the original? I can't fix the parts that were butchered and vandalized without reverting, because too much was randomly removed. I explain everything I do in here. No one else does. 72.144.60.85 18:57, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
I am trying to improve the original. Here are some things that are wrong with the original. In the intro:
- Actually you did nothing to the original. Last time I checked those changes were made before you came.
- It is too long and hagiographic.
- It's taken from several official biographies, and is no more hagiographic than some of the information of Newton, Einstein, and others. I did shorten it though, it was a bit long.
- The "editor's note" is bad style.
- That's true. That should be moved.
- "mechanical and electrical engineer" can be shortened to engineer
- Um no...there are computer, industrial, civil engineers too
- He is recognized as one of the most accomplished inventors, not scientists.
- No, he made fundamental contributions to physics theory (it states right in the intro) as well as numerous other fields.
- The sentence "Aside from his work on electromagnetism and engineering, Tesla is said to have contributed in varying degrees to the fields of robotics, ballistics, computer science, nuclear physics, and theoretical physics" is unsourced and misleading. Few people, aside from Teslaphiles, think he contributed to any of these things.
- Do some research.
- He did not die forgotten. That is melodramatic and wrong.
- The fact that nearly all official biographies state this is clear enough evidence he died pretty much forgotten.
- The caption writes "Dr. Nikola Tesla." It is not conventional to use a title with the first name. Why not just "Nikola Tesla."
- Fine change that.
Aside from those changes, some links in the table of electromechanical devices, paragraphs about Edison and Hinduism which could easily be removed, and some minor rephrasings and changes to links, there is essentially no difference between the two versions. Finally, as far as I can see, "physicists" are a superset of "researchers in theories of gravity".
- It didn't state anything about "researchers in theories of gravity"...in fact, it said "researchers".
Also, you've violated the 3RR.
- Ok.
–Joke 19:12, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
I've reported the 3RR. Hopefully those lazy 3RR admins will do something for once :-))). Joke - credit to you for trying to sort out this page. I hope you persist. While you do, I'll try to help William M. Connolley 22:45, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- I am getting tired of all the senseless and childish reverts and re-reverts on this article. Therefore, I am disassociating myself with it. When you CHILDREN decide to agree on an article, then I shall return. Erzahler 22:30, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
Speculation
On par with a recent edit by Philosophus, I removed the line "It was possible that Tesla was told of the plans of the physics award committee and let it be known that he would not share the award with Edison." because it is seemingly an opinion placed in the middle of a biography. It could possibly be readded with a source stating "Some Biographers conclude......." Etc...
72.144.150.233 09:02, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- It is NOT an opinion placed in the middle of a biography. It is from various news stories of newspapers at the time. It is also recorded in most of the reliable biographies (Man out of time, Wizard, etc ...) which cite that he and Edison were told of this (and both were surprised when the prize was awarded to others). Removing the line is uncalled for and is another egregious act of removing information. 17:29, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
The Seifer book "Wizard" contains documentation from the Nobel committee files that neither Tesla nor Edison was offered a Nobel. There was an incorrect story in the London Daily Telegraph in early November, 1915, from their correspondent in Copenhagen, reprinted in the New York Times, that listed Tesla, Edison, and several others as recipients. Tesla said the previous day's NY Times was the first he had heard of the possibility. The info was all wrong, about other supposed recipients as well, and was corrected. The recipients had actually been decided 9 months before. See the article on Nobel Prize Controversies for more info. This is a myth which has been debunked. The various sources were all basing it on an erroneous press report. Edison 17:46, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
Compatibility with Nature line
I removed "Tesla considered his exploration of various questions raised by science as ultimately a means to improve the human condition with the principles of science and industrial progress, and one that was compatible with nature.[1]" because its a very unusual line. I put it here in talk so someone can fix it up and have it make more sense, and be more "compatible" (no pun intended) with the article. 72.144.150.233 09:11, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
- How is this "very unusual"? 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs) 17:29, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Encyclopædia Britannica
In thier article on Ferraris, Galileo ... "Meanwhile, other physicists came independently to the same principle — among them Nikola Tesla, who applied and patented it. In the assessment of Thomas Edison they state, "yet [Edison] employed as his aides, at various times, a number of eminent mathematical physicists, such as Nikola Tesla and A.E. Kennelly." They themselves (though not explicity stating him being a physicists in his own article) call him a "Serbian U.S. inventor and researcher". And note, at the end of his entry that "Due to lack of funds, many of his ideas remained only in his notebooks, which are still examined by engineers for inventive clues.".
This latest lil' series of "improvement" (and I use that term loosely) on the Wikipedia article of Tesla proves that Wikipedia suffers from opinions at the cost of facts.
(ps. Inparticular the actions of User:Joke, User:Hillman, and User:William M. Connolley)
134.193.168.250 (talk · contribs) 14:06, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Electrotherapy
Something should be added on Tesla currents (as defined in the 'IEEE dictionary') and Tesla's pioneering work in Electrotherapy. This article could be cited for a reference:
- Rhees, David J., Electricity - `The greatest of all doctors': An introduction to `high frequency oscillators for electro-therapeutic and other purposes'. Proceedings of the IEEE. Vol. 87, no. 7, pp. 1277-1281. 1999 ISSN 0018-9219
(PS., This is his article on it: Tesla, Nikola, "High Frequency Oscillators for Electro-Therapeutic and Other Purposes". 1898-09-13. (ed., available from tesla.hu))
134.193.168.250 (talk · contribs) 14:53, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Trolling?
I suspect the recent history of edits of this article may include some trolling, hence the new flag added to the headers at the top. I hope that all editors who feel genuine passion will employ restraint and discuss possibly controversial changes in this talk page before trying to unilaterally implement them. ---CH 23:30, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
- None of it has been discussed. The majority of anon greivances on here have been generally ignored and as far as I've seen, the users who are editing this page are in cahoots with eachother. LaGrange 00:39, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
- Both 134.193.168.250 and User:177.140.153.233 have pointed out the unsound actions of WMC and Joke (I'm not as certain of your participation) in the editing of this page. LaGrange 00:41, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
Note that
- the IP 134.193.168.250 (talk · contribs) is an instance of the kc.umkc.edu anon, registered to the University of Missouri in Kansas City, MO. Compare the Linda Hall Library anon, also geolocated in Kansas City, MO.
- I can't find in the history page any edits from the IP 177.140.153.233 (talk · contribs). This IP is registered to ARIN itself. Did you perhaps write down the wrong IP while trying to check registration? I guess you might have meant 72.153.86.152 (talk · contribs) (the mia.bellsouth.net anon)
In any case, you should be on the lookout for possible shilling.---CH 03:42, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- How ironical is your flag: ...Remember to always assume good faith. which you missed to assume yourself...Lakinekaki 05:27, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
Well, I am trying to reduce arguing so let's not start arguing over my motivations, Lakinekaki. And LaGrange, I don't understand who you think is "in cahoots" with whom, but if you look at Talk:Chaos theory you will probably agree that it is unlikely that I am "in cahoots" with Lakinekaki.
All I am asking is that the edit war cease. Let's try this instead: if you don't like something in the article,
- describe your objection here in the talk page,
- present an argument why you think it should be changed,
- describe the change you want to see,
- react reasonably and fairly to comments on your proposals.
The talk page is here for this kind of discussion, and in my experience compromise is often possible. Fair enough? ---CH
Semi-protected
Note: this page is semi-protected at the moment, largely in response to anons breaking 3RR. I'm in favour of keeping it for a while; if anyone else has strong opinions that it should be lifted (or kept), please place them here where people can see. William M. Connolley 13:27, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
It's sad the that users Hillman, WMC, and Joke can destroy this page. WMC's, inparticular, ignorance and removal of the verifiable and cited facts (such as that Tesla's papers and writing are still being researched today; he's repeatedly questioned this [but has been cited by the standard EB professionals (see above)]). Hillman, WMC, and Joke have before tried to exclude cited and reliable information; this probably will not stop. WMC is in favour of keeping semi-protected for a while because then the opinionated editors (the ontes cited and others that can be contacted to do so on thier behave [such as IRC, etc.) can remove information that they deem "extraneous" or "bloat" and remove the more valid and cited information. As stated in other posts, Wikipedia suffers the ill informed opinion at the cost of verifable and reliable facts. The pathological skeptical actions of some of these editors is at Wikipedia's peril. 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs) 16:39, 25 May 2006 (UTC) (registered to Linda Hall Library, Kansas City, MO)
- Thanks for sharing. –Joke 16:42, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
- Our Linda Hall Library anon also edited History of perpetual motion machines very recently. ---CH 18:58, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
Negotiations with British Government on Death Ray
I have doubts about the accuracy and timescales in this article refering to Tesla's negotiations with the British government. I also am doubtful about linking them only to Chamberlain. The article states negotiations began in the Twenties. Baldwin was prime minister 1923-24, 1924-29 and 1935-37 whilst Chamberlain was prime minister 1937-40 and he was replaced by Churchill, not Baldwin.
I suggest removing the line "The incoming Baldwin government..." and adding a line making it clear this is conjecture, not established fact.
There is established folklore in the UK about successive British governments interest in a "Death Ray", but I've been unable to find any hard facts. Arpley88 08:05, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
- This is not conjecture! This is not folklore ... sessh ... it's a fact .... 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs)
- Nikola Tesla worked on an actual Death ray in the early 1900's and at the time of his death. He offered the US War Department the secrets of his "teleforce" weapon on January 5 1943 but was assumed to be crazy. Tesla then offered his device to several European countries. Records which recently turned up in Russia showed that his proposed death ray was based on a narrow stream of atomic clusters of liquid mercury or tungsten accelerated by high voltage, probably produced by a huge Tesla Coil. At the time of his death, a prototype compact version of the "death ray" called an "Anti-Tank gun" was located in a trunk in the basement of his hotel. Immediatly after his death a Russian spy had raided the room and the safe containing the schematics of the "death ray". The FBI never found any of the important parts of the schematics nor the trunk with the prototype, as far as we know. Schematics of the projector nozzel have surfaced, though. 204.56.7.1 19:56, 30 May 2006 (UTC) (taken out of the Death ray history, now a redirect)
- PBS has a good page on this. "A Weapon to End War". :204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs)
- Other time-period news articles that might help you.
- "Tesla Invents Peace Ray". New York Sun, July 10, 1934.
- "Death-Ray Machine Described", New York Sun, July 11, 1934. (see http://Tesla.hu)
- "Tesla, at 78, Bares New 'Death-Beam"', New York Times, July 11, 1934. (see http://Tesla.hu)
- "Tesla's Ray". Time, July 23, 1934. (see http://Tesla.hu)
- "'Death Ray' for Planes". New York Times, September 22, 1940.
- O'Neill, John J., "Tesla Tries To Prevent World War II". (unpublished Chapter 34 of Prodigal Genius) (PBS)
- 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs) 20:18, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
- Bear in mind that large parts of this article may be dodgy, especially the wacky death-ray stuff. If you think you know better, please edit away. William M. Connolley 11:33, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
- Bear in mind that you have an uninformed opinion. 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs) 20:18, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
- Please be polite, Linda Hall Library anon (see WP:CIV). Also, please see the header for instructions on how to wikisign your comments. TIA ---CH 03:12, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- I'll be polite when the editors stop being a prick (in the side) [this was suggested before, but removed by your friend, WMC]. WP:CIV states exactly what you (among others) are doing, personally targeted behavior that causes an atmosphere of greater conflict and stress. A editor can wikisign thier comments with ~~~~ or ~~~ (the note @ top is a guideline). 204.56.7.1 14:52, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
Superconductivity references
Pulled out of the archives (as posted by user:reddi), just so more ramblings and POV edits can be headed off.
- The patent office classifies U.S. Patent 685012 as superconductivity technolgy via several classifications
- Thomas Valone (ed.) book contains the information on the superconductivity in one of the essays. The essay "Effects of Tesla's Life and Electrical Inventions" specifically notes this.
- Oliver Nichelson talks of Tesla's invention in this context.
- In "The Problem of Increasing Human Energy - Through Use of the Sun's Energy," (The Century Illustrated Magazine), Tesla cites Carl von Linde (inventor of a method for liquefying air via "self-cooling"). As Tesla states, "This was the only experimental proof which I was still wanting that energy was obtainable from the medium in the manner contemplated by me ." In 1892, Tesla went to London and saw Professor Dewar's experiments with liquefied gases. Tesla noted that others had liquefied gases before, notably Ozlewski and Pictet. Later, Tesla was working on a project, together with other pojects, which would give a refrigerating machine of exceptional efficiency and simplicity. This is the time of the 1895 Houston Street lab fire which delayed his endeavors. Shortly afterward, "Linde announced the liquefaction of air by a self cooling process, demonstrating that it was practicable to proceed with the cooling until liquefaction of the air took place". Tesla sought to simplify Linde's accomplisment, also. Tesla's endeavors in his own projects (with this as one part) would lead to (according to him) a "self-acting machine deriving energy from the ambient medium".
- In addition to the above reference, Seifer ("Wizard, the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla". ISBN 1-559723-29-7 (HC)) in the footnote states that (though doubtful) it is probable that Tesla contemplated superconductivity for his world wireless system (this a decade before Onnes experiment). 204.56.7.1 (talk · contribs) 15:01, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
- The Linda Hall Library anon in Kansas City, MO; compare Reddi (talk · contribs)
- I have some concerns regarding shilling; see WP:SOCK. ---CH 15:31, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
There is no shilling, fraudulent or damaging. Have all the concerns you want, but there are WP:SOCK#Legitimate uses of multiple accounts (Keeping heated issues in one small area). User:reddi may or may not edit at the library here.204.56.7.1 17:08, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
Tesla's car
I've read some stuff about Tesla's car, which he apparantly demonstrated to his nephew Peter Savo in 1931. The car had an electric motor, but it seemed to get its power from some unknown but universally present source (dark energy, cosmic radiation, gravity). I'm no expert in the field so perhaps I'm talking complete nonsense here, but if it did indeed exist it would've been a fantastic yet forgotten invention. A "free energy" book you can order online claims to contain the instructions on how to build one yourself, but I doubt that as if that were the case we'd all be driving one now and free energy claims always tend to be overrated. Googling for Tesla's car brings up some information, but with little details and not always from the most reliable of websites. Does anyone know more about this and would it perhaps add to the article, or be worth an article of its own? BabyNuke 11:38, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
- Seifer ("Wizard, the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla". ISBN 1-559723-29-7 (HC), ISBN 0-806519-60-6 (SC)) talks about this, IIRC. Not sure if Valone's "Harnessing the Wheelwork of Nature" has anything. I'll look around. 204.56.7.1 17:31, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
Nationality
I have tried my utter best to portray this issue in NPOV. I have clearly stated that the topic of his natinality is disputed between Croatians and Serbs (which it is), and have taken absolutely no sides. Yes, I'm Croatian, and as much as I would like to post that Nikola Tesla was Croatian (and all Croatian children are thought this in school, even myself all those years ago), I conform to the NPOV rule just like everyone else should.
So please, don't revert this without just cause, which I doubt you could find.
xompanthy 15:11, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
Could you put it as a references note? or fotenote? It just seems a bit jarring there in the intro. 204.56.7.1 17:27, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
template:ref - template:fn
Well I added it right after the claim that he was a Serbian-American inventor. I actually changed it to "American inventor,..., of Serbian and Croatian origin" (which seems a lot more NPOV), but it seems that User:Krytan felt that needed to be reverted. In the hope that we can make this viewpoint a bit more NPOV and avoid a revert war, I left it at that.
I think it should stay in that position since it is a very controversial topic, still argued over even today amogst Croatains and Serbs. And since Wikipedia is NOT a place where one states his own beliefs but FACTS, it should remain there.
And if some pro-Serbian or pro-Croatian user decides that the article should reflect what they BELIEVE is correct, they can go somewhere else.
-- xompanthy 21:01, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
- What to do, what to do? This has got to be one of the silliest edit wars I have seen here to date. I suppose it would be very naive of me to suggest that we call Tesla an American of Balkan heritage and leave it at that?---CH 11:14, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, it would. And what you find silly others might not. -- xompanthy 14:50, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
- Actually, since someone removed that section yet again, I find myself not caring. Keep it POV if it means that much to some people. -- xompanthy 20:40, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
- I beleive Tesla's own words are the best guideline - he stated "I'm proud of my Serbian heritage and of my Croatian homeland..." . I could argue on both sides for many reason, but the truth is that he was of Serbian nationality, and of Cratian domicile (altough it was as many state a part of Austro-Hungarian Empire, Lika was integral part of Croatia, who shared the rights to Hungarian crown...and the ages of Tesla's youth are the ages in which the Croatian and pan-slavic (unity of all Slavic nations) ideas were the strongest... they resulted with State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs , and later on with Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes...-- Vladimirko 22:23, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
Why I removed reference! - Let's take aside that the article, from (othervise resputable source) was full of incorrections, disputable and biased... Article in question is not relevant reference for establishing anyone's nationality, not even Tesla's, which is mentioned in article. Relevant source and/or reference would be any (preferably legal) record, or paper issued (or recorded) for or by Tesla, stating his nationality. It might be birth record, family record (as kept in parishes at that time), census data, school record, (all of the above mentioned is most probably available in States's Archive of Croatia in Zagreb), then, it might be any imigration data in U.S. (check up the Ellis Island records), or it might be taken anywhere in Tesla's correspondency (available in Museums in Smiljan or Belgrade). Newspaper article, no matter how god or bad it is, cannot be reference source for establishing such fact! Just not to leave article in mention out, here it is:
- Snjezana Vukic, "In Balkans, sparks still fly on Tesla anniversary", Associated Press, July 9th 2006.
-- Vladimirko 08:31, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
People! Some of you confounding the issue with bad terminology. What you call "nationality" is in fact called ethnicity in English. Tesla's ethnicity is, as far as I know, not disputed by anyone: Tesla was a Serb. Still, Tesla is put into e.g. Category:Serbian physicists, despite clear Wikipedia guidelines (Wikipedia:Categorization_of_people#By_nationality_and_occupation) that people be categorized by nationality, not ethnicity, except in explicity named categories such as e.g. Category:Serbian people by ethnic or national origin (which, interestingly enough, doesn't exist as of this writing). His nationality was not Serbian: his parents never lived in Serbia, nor did he. GregorB 19:21, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
"Eccentric Serbian-American engineer who made many contributions to the invention of electromagnetic devices. Tesla was Serb who was born in the Croatian village of Smiljan in the Lika region, which at the time was part of Austrian monarchy. His father was an orthodox church priest." Wolfsram Research
--Lowg 01:27, 13 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm suprised Croatia is claiming Tesla as his own, seeing as how as soon as Krajina was occupied by the Croatian army, Tesla's statue was destroyed. An interesting way to show respect. In any case, I find the dispute hilarious. His father was a Serb Orthodox priest, and he was christened in the Serbian Orthodox rite... All of his indirect descendants (for Tesla had no children) were Serbian, not Croatian. This is easy enough to find. I can't see a single argument that he is Croatian, other than the fact that the Austro-Hungarian region he was born in was later to become Croatia. I find this irrelevant, and it says nothing about his nationality.
What nation included his birthplace of Smiljan when he was born, and when he came to the US? What nation is his hometown part of now? These questions of fact have some bearing on what words should be used here. I found in Tesla's US "hometown paper," the New York Times, the following: The first mention of his nationality I found was 7/19/1891 , p4, where he was called "Austro-Hungarian." March 4, 1895, it said he came here from "Servia," which was the spelling the NY Times used for Serbia in that era. March 31, 1895, p13 “He is hardly the representative of any European nationality; perhaps he might be better spoken of as a flower of a mountaineering clan. Just as the Highlanders in Scotland have beaten back the tide of invasion, so his people in the highlands of the Adriatic, have fought, cursed, and slaughtered Turks ever since the turban invaded Europe. His people are a rural people, and willing to be peaceful, but ever ready to turn their sheperds’ crooks into spears amd their scythes into bloody blades. They have been planted from time immemorial in the Adriatic mountains, but it was, perhaps, a happy chance that took thither in the turbulent First Napolean days an officer of the victorious French legions, who intermarried and thus gave to the aboriginal stock the blood of which Tesla is the latest and best product.” July 16, 1895 p 10 said he was “a Montenegran.” Sept 29, 1895 p 22, he was described as a "Servian." July 10, 1934, p19 said he was born "in Smiljan, in Austrian Croatia (now part of Yugoslavia. He is the son of a Greek father, a clergyman, and a Serbian mother, Georgiana Mandic, an inventor, and the daughter of an inventor." {single parenthesis in original}. His obituary, Jan. 8, 1943, p 19 said " Nikola Tesla was born at Smiljan, Lika, a border country of Austria-Hungary, on July 10, 1856. His father was a Greek clergyman and orator, and his mother, Georgina Mandic, was an inventor." Jan, 9, 1943, p13 says " Yugoslavia, where Tesla was born of Serbian parents, will be officially represented by..." May 8, 1949, p27, says "..Nikola Tesla, American inventor who was born in Croatia of Serbian parentage.." June 26, 1956 p43 says ""A native of Croatia, Mr Tesla came to the United States in 1884." Jan 24, 1960, px19, calls him "..Croatian born.. " On Feb 9, 1967, p78, calls Tesla "Yugoslavian born" and note that he spoke Croatian with the hotel Maitre d. April 14, 1974, p 12 calls him "Serbian born." Sep 7, 1980, pE20 calls him him “the Serbian inventor.” July 6, 1982, pc3, refers to “ the grandiose claims made in his behalf, particularly by some Tesla admirers who share his Croatian origins.” Sep 18, 1983, pH33,says he was “born in a town in Croatia in what was then Austria-Hungary and is now Yugoslavia." Feb 23, 1997, pLI25 says he was "Born in 1856 to a well-placed Serbian family..” April 19, 1999, pE5, calls him "a Croatian born Serb.” So could we say "Tesla was born of Serbian parents in Smiljan, Lika, Croatia, then a part of the military frontier of the Austro-Hungarian empire, and now part of Croatia.” This mirrors the words used in the article on Smiljan. I don’t know how we explain the “Greek clergyman father” being Serbian unless he was perhaps a Serbian who was also an Orthodox priest.Edison 22:17, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Oh, how many words... :-) So, here it is, when settling in US, people coming from this part of the world were more confused than anybody reading text above! I found immigration data on ellisisland.org for my greatgrandfather, his sister, her housband and several other family members that came on the same ship, same date from two neighbouring houses. Almost each and every one of them (according to immigration data) came from other country, territory and city, half of them even had their names missspled! According to data they were from Slovenia?, Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Ottoman empire?! and some other territories for which I haven't the slightest idea how they came in this records! Reason(s): Ignorant American officials! and people that came from "region that was not more then century ago part of Illiryc provincies occupied by Napoleon, part of Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia that acording to treaties from 11th century was in personal union with Hungary, and with Hungary together under Habsburgs (Austrian rouling family), so part of the Austrian empire as well, as they lived close to border of Bosnia, territories was under direct governing from Vienna, which was anachronism at that time, but as they had some tax privileges, they were obliged to serve army wherever "crown" needed them!... To CTC, Tesla lived not far from them. Few decades later, Austrian empire collapsed, and most of people declared themselves according to newly grown ideas, as Illyrs, or south Slavs, (Yougoslavian academy of sciencies was founded in Croatia before Yougoslavia named itself as such)or by ethnicity or regionally (and btw, according to international laws Croatia claims it's statehood from 10-th century)... So when Yougoslavia was founded, most of immigrants accepted it as their homeland, accepting their differences too! Not many years later, Serbian king and governmant on head of South Slav country, founded on bases of equality, started redirecting tax money to Serbia, and with time the hell broke loose! But that's another story! So, when (according to his nephew) a politician greeted Tesla on his 80-th birthday as "son of Serbian origin born in Croatia", TESLA replied "As I'm proud of my Serbian roots and Croatian homeland, as you Yougoslav politicians act I'll have no homeland to return to, your haterid is so great, that if it would be possible to turn it into electricity, it would light up the world" (It was just some time after one of the gretest politician of the time(from peasant's party) was assasinated in parliament in Belgrade)... I'm totally in favour of total removal of ANY ethnical, national or geographical(Serbian, Croatian, American) reference from introduction line! Tesla was GREAT MAN and he probably turns in his grave on such disputes! I worked for to many hours today so please fogive me on any typo's I made, you might correct them if they boughter you, and...You've got the point-- Vladimirko 00:48, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Calling him a "Croatian/Serbian inventor" is just ridiculous. He was born a Serb in what was then Austria. He was educated in Austria and spent more than a half of his life in US. He has nothing to do with Croatia other than the area he was born in is part of Croatia *today*. Calling him an American has a lot more merit than calling him Croatian and I don't really see anyone calling him American.
Following the logic above (“He is not Croatian as he was born in Austro-Hungarian region“, or “He was educated in Austria”), we could also say that Nikola Tesla is Turkish, because Serbia was Turkish region were Serbs were serving 400 years under Ottoman Empire and probably mixed with Turkish, which is both nonsense.
We could safely said that Nikola Tesla was not Serbian inventor. He was Croatian inventor with Serbian origins. Nikola Tesla himself was always proud of being a Croatian of Serbian origins (a similar way as today we say American of African origin). He stated that himself many times and it is recorded in his work and documents.
The fact is that Croatia had advanced education system that leads to many discoveries (propeller, torpedo, first refillable pen etc …). Tesla is product of that education system as well as other famous Croatian scientists. If Tesla would be born in Serbia, he would probably be a smart guy in his village and this is all what he would become. He would do nothing in terms of innovations. The fact that the first Serbian dictionary was made 300 years after Croatian is telling us that under Ottoman Empire Serbian educations system was really poor.
Zizula 01:36, 17 September 2006 (UTC) Zizula 20:06, September 16 2006 (UTC)
I see that Wikipedia states Tesla was a "world-renowned Serb-AMERICAN inventor". The fact is that Tesla, himself, said that he is proud of him being a Serb, and proud of Croatia being his home-country. I just wonder where in history did he become an American? No, the fact that all his works have ben done in America does not mean he EVER was, or will EVER be an American inventor. He is as much as an American as Einstein.
- Tesla had American citizenship after all... --Djordje D. Bozovic 16:34, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
FTL claims
Can someone note that some "Tesla Coils" transmissions were "many" times the speed of light and that this is related to cherenkov radiation (and Bremsstrahlung which Tesla used in his X-ray experiments). Thank you. 204.56.7.1 17:00, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
(PS., most modern text on this subject cites cherenkov radiation as what Tesla was referring to when he talks about FTL transmissions)
- Are you saying that when Tesla mentioned FTL transmission he was referring to Cherenkov radiation? Can you give an example of a modern textbook (on physics?) which says this? ---CH 11:10, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
When Tesla mentioned FTL transmission, was he was referring to Cherenkov radiation? Yes. Is there modern textbook on physics that state this? No (not that I know of), modern biographies on Tesla DO state this though.
Is there an example of a modern biography? Valone, Thomas, "Harnessing the Wheelwork of Nature". ISBN 1-931882-04-5 (pg. 122-123). Valone's books states, "Tesla had found that at electrical resonance with the earth, electromagnetic waves had become supraluminal [...]. In the supraluminal sense, they moved faster than the speed of light". Then Valone footnotes (bottom pg. 123), "[...]speed of EM phase velocity is v=1/sq rt (LC) which can be faster than light speed in a vacuum." Valone refers the reader to an article, Harold Willis Milnes, "Faster than light?", Radio-Electronics, Vol. 54,, Janurary 1983, for more information.
Are there other references indirectly to this? Yes. Seifer, ["Wizard, the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla". ISBN 1-559723-29-7 (HC), ISBN 0-806519-60-6 (SC)] has a whole chapter called "faster than the speed of light (1927 - 40)". Seifer states "Verification for Tesla that there existed particles that travelled faster than the speed of light were purportedly discovered in the late 1890s whn he invented a device to capture radiant energy. The machine [...] comprised, in essence an insulative plate [...] made out of the 'best quality of mica as a dielectric'" (pg., 423). IF you look at Cherenkov radiation, it is electromagnetic radiation emitted when a charged particle passes through an insulator at a speed greater than the speed of light in the medium. Matter can be accelerated beyond this speed. Cherenkov radiation results when a charged particle exceeds the speed of light in a dielectric (electrically insulating) medium through which it passes. The Bremsstrahlung phenomenon was discovered by Nikola Tesla during high frequency and X-ray research he conducted, several years earlier than the FTL claims.
USPatent 18:46, 19 June 2006 (UTC) (PS., this is in addition to the much older (and more outdated) claims of superluminal communication and, tachyons IIRC, of Cheney ("Tesla: Man Out of Time", ISBN 0-13-906859-7 ))
Do note that the c limit is a the speed of light in a vacuum only. In the dirac sea of reality, there is not a perfect vacuum. And, as was Tesla's belief, there is a medium throughout space (at the minimum, space itself).
You can also read:
- A-Ahamid Aidinejad and James F. Corum, "The Transient Propagation of ELF Pulses in the Earth-Ionosphere Cavity"
- James F. Corum and Kenneth L. Corum, "Disclosures Concerning the Operation of an ELF Oscillator"
- James F. Corum and Kenneth L. Corum, "A Physical Interpretation of the Colorado Springs Data"
- James F. Corum and Kenneth L. Corum, "Critical Speculations Concerning Tesla's Invention and Applications of Single Electrode X-Ray Directed Discharges for Power Processing, Terrestrial Resonances and Particle Beam Weapons"
USPatent 19:25, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
Nobel claims
I NPOVed the Nobel Prize claims a month or two ago, but now they are back in their highly fan-like form. I have tried to fix them, but there seems to be some resistance. Could others look into making this have a NPOV? --Philosophus T 00:03, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
Read:
- Cheney, Margaret, "Tesla: Man Out of Time", ISBN 0-13-906859-7
- Seifer, Marc J., "Wizard, the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla". ISBN 1-559723-29-7 (HC), ISBN 0-806519-60-6 (SC)
- O'Neill, John H., "Prodigal Genius". ISBN 0-914732-33-1
These should contain the references that you need. This page also give a tast of the news reports about it. Edison and Tesla Win Nobel Prize in Physics. Literary Digest, December 18, 1915.
There isn't anything "fan-like" about this. It's statements of fact. 204.56.7.1 19:26, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
Please read: Nobel Prize controversies. The text there was incorporated here. 204.56.7.1 19:43, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
Another site: Controversy about This Year's Nobel Prize in Medicine teslasociety.com 204.56.7.1 20:00, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
Another verifiable site for the initial incorrect report is the New York Times, Nov 6, 1915, p1: "Edison and Tesla to get Nobel Prizes" which based their statement on the Copenhagen correspondent of the Daily Telegraph. Also see Nov 7, 1915, p12, "Tesla's discovery Nobel prize winner". The article said "Nikola Tesla, who, with Thomas Edison is to share the Nobel Prize in physics, according to a dispatch from London, said last night he had not yet been officially notified of the honor. His only information on the matter was the dispatch in the New York Times." Tesla thought the honor was for the transmission of energy without wires. He said he thought Edison was worthy of a dozen Nobel Prizes. He had often expressed his friendship with and admiration for Edison, and gave no hint he would refuse the honor if Edison was also getting it. The reported antipathy toward Edison only showed up when he was elderly. Finally Dec 28, 1915, p83 the NY Times reported that the initial report was incorrect. It had also given an incorrect report for the person to receive the chemistry award, further disproving the claim that Tesal refused the prize because Edison was also getting one. Also disproof of any great antipathy between them causing them to refuse the 1915 Nobel Prize is that in 1916 Tesla accepted the Edison Medal'For meritorious achievement in his early original work in polyphase and high-frequency electrical currents.' This often repeated claim that Tesla refused a Nobel prize needs something like a rejection letter from the Nobel files, or a memoir by someone involved with the Nobel award, or papers from Tesla's files. In other words, something more than someone writing a book or creating a webpage and stating it is so without a good source. Edison 23:48, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
There is not much room for controversy. Seifer in "Wizard" pp378-380 has obtained detailed info from the Nobel people. Tesla never received a Nobel nomination in 1915, so he did not refuse it. Neither did Edison. Out of 38 nominations for the prize in physics, Edison received one and Tesla zero. The winners were the Braggs, father and son. There was an erroneous press report as listed above. Tesla also received one bid out of 38 in 1937, again not enough for him to win the prize. No nomination, no controversy, other than perhaps that he might have deserved one.I am removing refrence to the 1915 Nobel Prize and Tesla.Edison 22:56, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
There needs serious help in outlining the Dynamic theory of gravity. Both CH and William M. Connolley seem to be pushing a anti-tesla POV (as seen from above and in that article).
CH (User:Hillman) edits of POV - http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_theory_of_gravity&diff=40547941&oldid=39938292
CH actions:
- Removed referencecs to The Man Who Invented the Twentieth Century: Nikola Tesla, Forgotten Genius of Electricity, Robert Lomas, Headline Book Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0747262659
- Removed referencecs toTesla, Nikola, "How Cosmic Forces Shape Our Destiny". New York American, February 27, 1925.
- appeartly didn't know/uinderstand that Tesla release this statement to the press, as seen from this edit http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_theory_of_gravity&diff=next&oldid=40537195 and here removing the citations that there was an Interview with press on 81st birthday observance http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_theory_of_gravity&diff=next&oldid=40541163
- put in "in Maxwell's theory there are no longitudinal electromagnetic waves" except that there are longitudinal electromagnetic medium waves (ex: waves in plasma) as seen from this edit http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_theory_of_gravity&diff=next&oldid=40537850
- removed external sites that is relevant http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dynamic_theory_of_gravity&diff=next&oldid=40541881
- putting in weasel words
WMC's actions, among other things:
- Removed "which some feel anticipates Ernest Rutherford's nuclear model of the atom. Tesla further claimed that there exist carriers transmitting "tensions or electrostatic strains". Some claim to see these statements as an anticipation of later work on elementary particles."
- Thinks he is Wolfgang Pauli by putting in "Today it could only be described as not even wrong"
References to improve that article:
- Seifer, Marc J., "Wizard, the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla". ISBN 1-559723-29-7
- The Life of Nikola Tesla by John J. O'Neill (1944) Fourth Part SELF-MADE SUPERMAN http://rastko.org.yu/istorija/tesla/oniell-tesla.html#_Toc496780563
- Tesla's Dynamic Theory of Gravity, from PowerPedia http://peswiki.com/index.php/PowerPedia:Tesla%27s_Dynamic_Theory_of_Gravity
134.193.168.227 23:36, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Born in Croatia
I don't see why it simply doesnt state he was born in Croatia, instead of Austrian Empire...it doesn't make sense. If we follow this pattern then half of famous Americans were born in British Empire, Czechs and Slovaks in Czechoslovakia and so on...
- Tesla was not born in Croatia, because it didn't exist then. The part of the Austrian Empire that is now called Croatia was then called Vojna Krajina, so it would be more accurate to write that as well instead of just Austrian Empire. And you can't be born in a country that doesn't exist at the time of your birth, can you? I'm sure his birth certificate didn't show that he was born in Croatia, but rather Austria. --serbiana - talk 06:25, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
- You haven't done your reading in full. Vojna Krajina, was the part of Croatia that had privileges and additional fundings from court as an defence zone from Ottoman Empire! ...and Croatia was constitutional part of Austro-Hungarian Empire!Vladimirko 17:59, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
- There was no "Croatia" when Tesla was born. Aslo, what was called "Croatia" was much smaller then today's country known as "Croatia", it was only a small territory around city of Zagreb.Homo Cosmosicus 12:36, 16 September 2006 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Homo Cosmosicus (talk • contribs)
But the common standard is to use the present country for geographical reasons. Why do you think for George Washington it doesnt state he was born in Britain, as the United States didn't exist then. If we follow your logic, then all Serbs born in medieval time were born in Turkish empire, because Serbia didn't exist then.
Well they were born in the Ottoman Empire genius, because Serbia didn't exist. Of course Washington wasn't born in the US, it would be idiotic to agree with you and say that he had been. He was born in a British colony... --estavisti 22:08, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
It is clearly stated that Tesla's birthplace was in present date Croatia, and I don't see why are Croatians so much upset about the fact that in time of Tesla's birth, it was part of Austrian Empire? Archimedes wasn't born in Italy, nor Heraclites in Turkey, although the places of their birth are today situated there. Speaking of which, Michael I. Pupin was born in Banat, which was then part of Serbian Voivodship, but nobody is that vain to forge the fact that it was in fact in Austrian Empire. Ridiculous. Marechiel 16:14, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Why is Tesla claimed to be a Serbian-American if he was of Croatian descent (by today's standards)? Many books from Croatia claim Tesla is Croatia. Case in point: if you are born to a Pole and a Russian, but you're born in Spain, does that make you spanish, or polish/russian? The later, correct?
Tesla stated that he was proud of being a Serb, and of Croatia as his country. I belive that one's roots (his/her "blood") are the most important. However, of high importance is the country where a person grows up and which he/she him/herself claims to be his/her motherland. Tesla can be called a Serb, as well as a Croat, for he was of Serbian blood and he called Croatia his motherland. True, his works were done in America, but Tesla can not be called an American inventor.
- Tesla was not of Croatian descend, nor he was half-Croatian half-Serbian. Both his parents were pure Serbs (In one letter Tesla writes about the deep medieval Serbian roots of his mother's family, the Mandićs). The fact that someone was born in Croatia doesn't make them Croats, you know. And Tesla wasn't even born in Croatia, he was born in what many years later became the Republic of Croatia. :) --Djordje D. Bozovic 16:23, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
- Tesla just can't be a Croat. At the time he was born, his birth place was not part of Croatia (and even if it was, then he would perhaps be a Croatian, and not a Croat again), and none of his ancestors were Croats. On the other hand, Tesla did have an American citizenship. Tesla was born in Austria-Hungary, he was a Serb by ethnicity, and an American by citizenship. Again, not a Croat at all. ;) --Djordje D. Bozovic 16:28, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
In sentence "According to legend, Tesla was born precisely at midnight during an electrical storm, to a Serb family in the village of Smiljan near Gospić, in the Lika region of the Austrian Empire, in Croatian part od Military frontier, located in present-day Croatia", I removed part which says "in Croatian part of Military frontier" because of folowing reasons: first, there was no such a thing as Croatian part of Militatry frontier, second, Lika region is more narower, and therby more precise specification, third, sentence itself had more than enough geographical specifications. Uross 23:23, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- Uros: you should have read Military_Frontier before editing the article, there were the Croatian and the Banat parts (Banat_Krajina). Phrase "in Croatian part of Military frontier" makes sense, please bring it back. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Zigzig (talk • contribs) 10:23, 24 January 2007 (UTC).
Wow!
I got to know a bit about this guy only because I happened to live for several years around the corner from the site of his old lab in Shoreham, NY. When I first saw the place in 1974, White's gorgeous architecture was still visible. Before long, it was hidden behind a hideous corrugated metal facade and a shiny barbed-wire and chain-link fence, and most of the beautiful old trees were replaced by a parking lot. A few local residents had become fascinated with Tesla, and as you probably know if you're reading this, that can quickly slide into all-consuming obsession. My own interest in Tesla was only intermittently obsessive. I think everyone involved in the creation and evolution of this article deserves congratulations - it's amazing you all have managed to make this much sense out of such a mind-boggling subject!
One bit of interesting trivia: The Shoreham-Wading River library contained a book called Wasn't The Future Wonderful? - a collection of articles, reproducing the original pages, from futuristic pop-science pulp magazines mainly from the 1930s. I came across it around 1979, when it was just beginning to look as if the Shoreham Nuclear Power Station project might never reach completion. One of the articles was an interview with Tesla, dating from the early 1940s, in which he expressed the view that nuclear energy would never be harnessed. In fact, he may have believed there was no such thing! Perhaps it was his ghost that jinxed the Shoreham plant, whose history seemed to prove his point.
possible plagarism
I'm not certain if this is being or already has been addressed, but I've noticed that several portions of the this article are word-for-word matches with the Tesla page at supernaturalminds.com/NikolaTesla.html . Just wanted to make people aware of this.
- Based on the age of the site, it looks like the copy/pasting happened the other way around, that site took info from this one. That is OK, but he should really be displaying the GFDL licence info... Phidauex 18:19, 3 July 2006 (UTC)
invented the 20th century
Ok, I am not a Tesla expert but the quote "Many contemporary admirers of Tesla have deemed him the man who invented the twentieth century." seems a little over the top. It would sound better if it was a specific person for example "Lisa Simpson nobel laureate has said Tesla invented the twentieth century." There seems to be a bunch of strong feelings about this article so I didn't want to change anything out of hand. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.231.43.78 (talk • contribs)
Lomas titled a Lecture to South Western Branch of Instititute of Physics, "The Man who Invented the Twentieth Century". 134.193.168.252
Any romantic relationships?
Noone ever mentioned any single relationship of Tesla with a woman, at least when he was young. All I know of this subject is an anegdote saying: "Once on a party a woman, a great admiror of Tesla's work, approached him and asked if she could meet him and he said: "I'm sorry, my wife electra would be very jelaous of that." Or it went something like that. Who knows what he and Mark Twain were doing in his lab during late night? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Aljosa (talk • contribs)
Tesla was a sought out by the ladies of high society. He did have very close relations with some women (the wife of one of his friend may have been a non-physical love). He though turned many young girl away, following the life of invention and the research of electricity (which he believed that he could not do to the fullest in the married life). He was not homosexual though, as you imply. Cheney, a biographer of his, in the documentry on his life insuinated that he may have impaired his manhood though (after a hot french actress kept bugging him). That is speculation though. 134.193.168.252
I didn't mean to imply that he was homosexual, it was more a joke. Wikipedians are often pretty stiff :) I think that wikipedia article on Tesla is pretty good and is trying to cover all aspects of his life but it can't really be complete without covering romantic aspect of his life/personality. So that's why I started this section - to find out more about this rather important part of life and to put at least one sentence about that in the article. Tesla was obviously in control of all biological needs of his body (e.g. strictly calculated diet).—Preceding unsigned comment added by Aljosa (talk • contribs)
He was an obsessive-compulsive anti-social recluse, I doubt that he ever dated anyone. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Cold water (talk • contribs)
Howard Hughes was far quirkier and more OCD than Tesla, but was married, had mistresses, and reportedly had as lovers Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Gene Tierney, and Ava Gardner.Edison 15:00, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
Marc Seifer in his book "Wizard: the life and times of Nikola Tesla" says p18 that after Tesla dropped out of Technical University Graz in his junior year, he met "Anna" in his father's church and "fell in love." They went for walks etc. Then he started his undergrad studies afresh at Prague and she married someone else. Seifer cites Dragislav Petrovich, "A visit to Nikola Tesla" Politika, April 27, 1927, p4.
Protected
Please find a compromize solution on the talk page and then let me know when you are ready for the page to be unprotected abakharev 06:20, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
AD 9289:
- "Mommy, what are Croatians and Serbians?"
- "GalNet says that they were a couple of primitive tribes of Terra homo sapiens on Old Earth. Like most others at that time, the people of those tribes were conditioned from birth to believe that their 'country' (whatever that was) was important. Remember, we're going for your GalNet implant tomorrow; you can think about all of this stuff youself, much faster than I can tell you about it."
There sure are a lot of people nitpicking about things that most would consider, well, unimportant.
You folks aren't, er, prejudiced, are you? I thought most people had gotten past that by now.
I don't see any mention of what his skin color is, why should anyone care about his nationality?
--Scott McNay 06:44, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- Scott, do you care if someone cals you an Afghan, rather than American? Imagine that in 50 years, you are remembered as an Afghan. I mean, I'll just start calling you Afghan right now, according to you, it wouldn't matter. --KOCOBO 20:58, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- The issue is not what he is (or I am) but rather what is written. If can't agree, then just leave it out, and put an HTML comment in so that people will leave it alone, or simply say "disputed". --Scott McNay 08:14, 30 July 2006 (UTC)
Compromises
How about Ethnically Serb, Croatian-born, American engineer, or In Serbia he is considered Serb, in Croatia Croat and in the USA - American, or just remove all the ethnic labels from the lead all together. Both place of birth and the religion are seen in the first paragraph of bio. abakharev 06:51, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- On June 1st 1892, Tesla arrived in Belgrade due to a call for assistance from the Belgrade municipality. Several thousand people were there to greet him at the Belgrade train station. He addressed the gathered crowd, who saluted him:
- "There is something within me that might be illusion as it is often case with young delighted people, but if I would be fortunate to achieve some of my ideals, it would be on the behalf of the whole of humanity. If those hopes would become fulfilled, the most exiting thought would be that it is a deed of a Serb. Long live Serbdom!..." Tesla further said to the students of Belgrade University: "As you can see and hear, I have remained a Serb overseas where I have done some researches. You should do so and by your knowledge and hard work you should glorify Serbdom over the world." [1]
- I don't think it matters if Serbia considers him a Serb or what not, when Tesla himself clearly stated what he is and always will be. By the way, Croats don't consider him a Croat, simply because there is nothing that shows he was a Croat, considering his father was a Serbian Orthodox Priest, and his mother from a famous Serb family. But don't believe me, read what the Croats did to Tesla's house and statue during the war against Serbs.
- Alex, from your suggestions, I am not sure how much you know about Tesla, or even the claims some people are making here. The only solution is to put Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor,... And I reluctantly agree to the "American" part, but he did achieve his life's work in the States. Hiding the truth is not NPOV, everyone have that in mind. I think you've seen now that Tesla was a Serb, regardless of what any government or people of any country think. So, MAYBE we should write what Tesla actually said about himself. --KOCOBO 20:55, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- So far I have only heard the arguments to name him Serbian-American (in fact Brittanica did exactly this), any arguments for the Croatian part? Any reputable source naming him Croatian? abakharev 23:23, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- Since nobody argued for Tesla's Croatian heritage, I assume we have a consensus here. I will unprotect the article and revert to a "Serbian" version. Reversions back can be seen as violations of the WP:CON policy, so you better discuss them first of the talk page. abakharev 07:49, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
Tesla may have been an ethnic Serb but he had nothing to do with Serbia(I think he was once or twice in Serbia in total) thus cannot be Serbian scientist. The man was born in Croatia and consiered Croatia to be his homeland which he expressed on more than one occasion. The correct formation would be 'Croatian-American scientist of Serbian origin'. However the most liberal and fair would be to remove any mention of this at the begining of the article since the rest explains it. Also making his location of birth 'Austrian Empire(now Croatia)' is in direct collision with what the article says 'born in Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, then part of Austrian Empire'. Afrika Paprika 11:44, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
- Afrika paprika, aside from your rude reverting when the majority has clearly decided how the article should be formulated, you provide no evidence or concrete references for your claims. Why should I believe you? Why should anyone believe you, when your contributions clearly show that you are pushing Croatian POV. You keep removing well-referenced sources from other Serb-related articles like Dado Pršo (look how he keeps reverting the "ethnic Serb" part of the text), and the list goes on. This is a place where serious people come to discuss serious issues, and there is no place for nationalism here. We have all provided well-referenced sources, so please stop bothering us with your "theories" which everyone is quite sick of. Your actions are considered trolling, and to some aspects, vandalism. Thank you, --KOCOBO 21:43, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
- The majority has not decided. Two people having the same opinion on the subject cannot be and is not a consensus. Thus I shall keep revereting it as long as it needs to get in your little fascist head. As for Dado Prso the man considers himself to be a Croat and has publicly stated it more than once. User:Afrika Paprika 01:52, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Oh, oh, since when do you care what the actual person in the article declared about himself? No, evidence, no proof of your claims, this is the policy of Wikipedia. --KOCOBO 00:59, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I do care actually as all my changes can be confirmed. Unlike you who are pushing for a nationalistic propaganda. --User:Afrika Paprika 16:15, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
I have zero axe to grind, since I am of no Serbian or Croatian ancestry. Did Tesla ever call himself Serbian? Sure. And on his patent application for the induction motor, he referred to himself as: "I, Nikola Tesla, a subject of the Emperor of Austria, from Smiljan, Lika, border country of Austria Hungary." Yet it seems undeniable that Smiljan is now in Croatia. It appears to have been in a Croatian kingdom at the time, but Tesla's parents were undeniably ethnic Serbs. He should be listed as Croatian-born "Serbian-American" with some mention of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Balkan politics is complicated! He was ethnically Serb and he became a US citizen. Otherwise provide a verifiable source where Tesla said he was Croatian, not Serbian. I can show many where he was described as Serbian (or Servian in the spelling of that era). One newspaper artical even called him Montenegran! Edison 23:32, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Tone it down please: POV tag added
This article needs some serious toning down, so I have added a POV tag. Compare the bombastic introduction with the relatively modest phrasing in the Albert Einstein article. Personally after reading such an introduction, I am reluctant to take the rest of the article seriously. However the parts I looked at seemed to be good, and that introduction is doing the subject a disservice. Chicheley 00:24, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- With all due respect, his ethnicity is quite clear to everyone, and I have cited my sources. Only one user claims that this is not true, even though he has not shown a single piece of evidence. This is not reason enough to put a POV tag, and I have removed it. Instead, I would advise Afrika Paprika from being the only one that claims that Tesla was not a Serb. --KOCOBO 00:57, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Nobody disputes him being a Serb, but it seams to me that you insist on not allowing appearance of any mentioning of Croatia in his introduction. I'm prepared to add his ethicity myself every time I see it removed, IF ALL the data about his birth are present. If not, to cut down disputes it's better to remove such references completely! I'm glad that you don't insist anymore on that obviously nationalistic propaganda article as refference in introduction... I consider it as a great progress, and there still might be some hope for this article!-- Vladimirko 01:12, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Haha, you people are just funny :) Croatians and serbians are together trying to get to a consensus on a topic like Tesla's nationality. That's soo not gonna happen. You don't see that you're not just subjective on the matter but prejudiced (pristrani). Therefore I recommend that all ex-Yugoslavians shouldn't be let to decide the "truth" on the matter. We need a body that would check ONLY the facts, with no prejudicies and hotheads included. Something like a Hague Tribunal on Wikipedia. I know it's somewhat against the Wikipedia rules, but Wikipedia doesn't know croatians and serbians :)
Tesla was Serbian, he is sometimes referred to as Serbian-American
And here are the references to prove that:
- The Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, and scientist [2]
- His father Milutin, and his mother Djuka, were both Serbian by origin [3]
- On June 1st 1892, Tesla arrived in Belgrade due to a call for assistance from the Belgrade municipality. Several thousand people were there to greet him at the Belgrade train station. He addressed the gathered crowd, who saluted him: "There is something within me that might be illusion as it is often case with young delighted people, but if I would be fortunate to achieve some of my ideals, it would be on the behalf of the whole of humanity. If those hopes would become fulfilled, the most exiting thought would be that it is a deed of a Serb. Long live Serbdom!..." Tesla further said to the students of Belgrade University: "As you can see and hear, I have remained a Serb overseas where I have done some researches. You should do so and by your knowledge and hard work you should glorify Serbdom over the world." [4]
- Serbian/American Inventor [5]
- Serbian-born inventor Nikola Tesla [6]
- Nikola Tesla, Serbian-American inventor [7]
- US (Serbian-born) electrical inventor [8]
- He was of Serb descent and worked mostly in the United States [9]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American scientist [10]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, and scientist [11]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian inventor and scientist [12]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor and engineer and a master of electricity [13]
- Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) was a Serbian-American inventor [14]
- A Serbian-American physicist and electrical engineer [15]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian by birth [16]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian born inventor [17]
- The Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, and scientist [18]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-born American scientist and his archive was brought to Belgrade after his death in New York in 1943. [19]
- Nikola Tesla, was a Serbian electrical engineer [20]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian inventor [21]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor/electrical engineer [22]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American scientist, electrical engineer, and inventor [23]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, and scientist [24]
- ...this great Serb American. [25]
- Dr. Nikola Tesla, was a Serb [26]
- Nikola Tesla was a Serb [27]
I'd like to add that every website mentions this at the very beginning. I'd also like to add that searching "Nikola Tesla was a Croat" returned 2 results (both of them blogs), while "Nikola Tesla was a Croatian" returned an amazing 4 results, and all of those websites confirm that Tesla was Serbian, but born in what is today considered Croatia. Almost all of the websites also cite that he was born in Austria-Hungary, while a mere some mention that the city he was born in is in todays Croatia, which definately doesn't make him Croatian. So, don't believe me, look at the tons of references I just gave you in the above list. Thank you :) --KOCOBO 01:38, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- P.S. there is no doubt that Tesla was born in Austria-Hungary, and his birth certificate proves it. Imagine that New Haven, Connecticut, USA (place where Bush was born) becomes Canada in 40 years. Was George W. Bush born in Canada? --KOCOBO 01:44, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- All the articles you linked here talk about his ethnic origin, which is not disputed. The man was a Serb and openly declared as such though once when they asked him wheter he is a Croat or a Serbs said "it's the same thing in Lika". In any case what I am trying to say and was saying is that the man was ethnically a Serb, but was Croatian scientist as he was born in Croatia(which was part of Habsburg Monarchy) and both openly declared by him more than once. Thus he cannot be only "Serbian-American" or "Croatian-American", he can only be "Serbian-Croatian-America" scientist or none at all(meaning not mentioning this since the article already talks about it. -- User:Afrika Paprika 16:21, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Article aboutNikola Tesla is not propaganda article, and try to keep it so! As it may not seam at first glance, but Serbian propaganda machinery is pretty well developed in the world. I.e.
1. You may find claims that Dubrovnik was in Serbia, although it NEVER WAS, but you'll hardly find the fact that what's now suburbs of Belgrade WAS a part of Croatia few times in history... 2. Vojvodina less then 30 years ago had Hungarian and Croatian majority, and although ethnical clensing was never proclaimed it occured, as also in Republika Srpska territories in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where less then 10% of croats and muslims returned to thier homes! 3. And just BTW, Miloš Obilić, supposedly Serbian hero on Kosovo, came from catholic family, and Croat village of Kobilići (that existed long before the Serbs fled through from Turks) from central Bosnia, and is ancestor of som Croat Milošević families near Sarajevo and Kiseljak! I knew a person who was direct descendent of him, who claimed it in Belgrade's center in SANU ... those facts Great Serbian propagandist will never admit, and there is just too much of them! 4. Croatia after death of King Petar (Svačić) joined in personal union with Hungary, afterwards, Croat and Hungarian nobility offered joined crown to Habsburgs. Through all that time Croatia newer lost it's statehood, although their rights were diminished after killings os several members of Croatian nobility and Austro-Hungarian treaty afterwards... Through most of that time Serbia was a municipality within "Ottoman empire"... So, Croatia existed at that time as Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia in union with Kingdom of Dalmatia under supreme governmant of Habsburgs. It was recognised even by Hungarians during Austro-Hungarian Empire (just look at their coat of arms from that time or lookup on their parliament building in Budapest)... So, If you're born i.e. in Novi Sad, and the state on birth certificate is Yougoslavia, does it mean that you were not born in Serbia, does that mean that you were not born in Vojvodina? Or, if you were born in Priština, is it Kosovo, Serbia, was it in Yougoslavia?-- Vladimirko 14:14, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- First, some due disclosure. I'm not Serbian, or Croatian, or Austrian. I was not paid 100$ by a member of the Serbian Propaganda Machine in a dark coat.
- Next, my points...
- 1) -American belongs in the name. Tesla did most of his work in America, and was an American citizen. He died in America, and his funeral was in America. (though his remains now rest in Belgrade).
- 2) The first part of a Whatever-American's ethic identify typically involves the individual's ethinic affiliation. Typically NOT the birthplace's political status at the time of birth, or the current political status. Thats why we have Irish-Americans, instead of Great British-Americans. It is also why we have Ukrainian-Americans, not Soviet-Americans. If Telsa identified himself as an ethnic Serb, as it seems he did, then he would be Serbian-American. Ethnicity/origin-citizenship.
- 3)It should be noted that he was born in what was then the Austrian-Hungarian empire, and what is now Croatia, but that doesn't make him Croatian, or Austrian, or Hungarian, unless he said, and felt, that he aligned himself with any of those groups.
- 4)This argument is all pretty silly... Perhaps its just my impression, as someone who is an ethnic product of numerous people coming to the US from several continents, and people who were already here, that I don't feel like I identify specifically with any of them. It seems like there are a lot of groups that want so badly to OWN Tesla, that this has gotten more complex than it should be. If I were a famous scientist, my article would have to say, German-Irish-Thai-African-Native-American Scientist to satisfy everyone. Phidauex 16:54, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Nice Statement Phidauex - but the Tesla Case, as an South Slav Case is special in its own, thats because of History .. See .. As for Yugoslavia - everyone born in former Yugoslavia was first Yugoslavian - and then serb, croat, slowenian or what ever. But all this doesnt matter in the Tesla Case. Because Tesla was born before the SFRJ. As for that - It doesnt matter, where one was born in the Countries of Former Yugoslavia - Everyone knew, what Ethnic he falls into. Today for example, there are many Croatians living in Serbia - most of them in Vojvodina, born there many years ago. But they are still Croats - The same Thing with Serbs born and living in Croatia today - or in Slovenia or wherever. The Paradadoxon that we have with Tesla is, that we don't believe in his own Words. I read lots about him - and he never ever declared himself being a Croat - but often stating of being proud to be Serb -> This doesnt mean he was a Nationalist - You see, the former Croatia as we know it today, was Part of the Austro-Hungarians with a very Big Majority of Serbs living in the Krajina - which was a Military Zone once nearly becoming its own Autonomic Part, populated mostly by Serbs - as they settled there to defend against the Osmanians. Those People, like Teslas Family, lived in Serbian Villages or Communities - maintaining and living the Serbian Culture and visiting Seriban-Orthodox Churches regularly - which is very important (heres the only small similarity to the U.S., as there are many irish or italian people f.e. - living in own hoods - and living the way they ethnically belong to), as Teslas Father was an Serbian-Orthodox Priest and his Mother also born into a Family of Serbian Theologists. As for the Ethicity-Struggle we have today - back in this Time - People knew very well, who or what every single People was - without any doubts - unlike we are confronting it today. So even calling him a Croatian Scientist is ludicrous - As he never worked as an Scientist in Croatia or being teached there in Electromechanics or whatever. Sure, he sympathized with the Yugoslavian Idea - the Idea of every South Slav, living Peacful together - but this doesnt makes him a Croat or a Croatian Scientist, expecially integrating the Fact that many Croatians never sympathized with the Yugoslavian Idea and many Croatians and Serbians, living in Croatia past Times, gazed on each other with a wry look. As the Ethnic-Conflict or small Struggles, we still have today, are more complex in Former Yugoslav Countries than in every other Country Worldwide - we have to look back very deep into History, to find the correct answers - instead of contrieving our own Stories to make him something he never was - yet some people are not able, to believe in his own words.
Cheers
Afrika Paprika and some other (Croatian?) members keep deleting the Serbian reference about Tesla, he was so much proud of. This won't pass. I invite them to explain their frustrations here, instead of deleting facts from the article, since it is qualified as vandalism. Marechiel 16:15, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
- Actually I deleted nothing at first, I only added the fact he is also Croatian as much as he is Serbian. He was equally proud of being a Serb and being from Croatia, that has been openly stated by Tesla himself on more than one occasion. However after my addition of the fact he was and is also Croatian scientist certain memebers started removing that, thus the only compromise is to remove any mention of his nationality and ethnicity altogether at the begining of the article since the article clearly explains it further down. I am only deleting what is definately not a fact but real vandalism and revisonism.Afrika Paprikal 01:12, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
Afrika: Would you please provide a verifiable source for your statement that"He was equally proud of being a Serb and being from Croatia, that has been openly stated by Tesla himself on more than one occasion." I have read a fair amount of Tesla writings recently and have not seen such a statement, but I cannot prove a negative. It is for you to demonstrate where he said he was proud to be from Croatia. I do not deny it, but a verifiable source would end a lot of ethnic-pride bickering.Edison 23:39, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
- What is "verifiable source" for you? Something that has been published on the internet? In May 25th 1936 Vlatko Maček(leader of the Croatian opposition in K.of Yugoslavia) in a telegram to Tesla: "To the great son of Serbian people and his homeland Croatia, leader of manking in their struggle with nature we congratulate in the name of Croatian people"; Nikola Tesla answers: "Thank you for your much appreciated congratulations and honours. I am equally proud of Serbian origin and my Croatian homeland. Long live all Yugoslavs!" In 1892 during his visit to Zagreb he had a lecture on AC electricity said: "I consider my duty that as born son of my land help the city of Zagreb in every advice and act". --Afrika Paprika
- It is easy to show that Tesla, as a Serbian patriot and supporter of integral Yugoslavism (which was to melt all Yugoslav peoples into one, Yugoslav, nation) and King Alexander, whenever he spoke of Croatia, he viewed it as part of Yugoslavian state and a state of both Serbs and Croats, what Croatia used to be. He spoke of it more as a region than as a state, which can be shown in his speeches and articles about Kingdom Yugoslavia, where he agitated for its centralization, and against any secession. Modern Croatia is a national, exclusively Croat state, where Serbs were literally thrown out of Constitution, and where Tesla's compatriots today make less than 4% of population (what used to be up to 30%) as a result of 20th century ethnic wars.
- Today Croatia agitates against for everything Tesla fought for: centralized Yugoslavian Balkan state and the ideas that Serbs and Croats were one people of identical race, language and tradition. Croatia of today is not the Serbo-Croatian Yugoslav Croatia Tesla spoke of, and it couldn't be clearer. The only time Tesla ever lived to see an independent Croatian state was during WWII, when he openly supported young Yugoslavian King Peter II and his Chetnik army, who fought against Croatia and for the re-establishment of united Yugoslavia.
- His courteous reply to Macek (which was, by the way, private), especially with the ending exclamation Long live Yugoslavs! does not change a thing about his opinion towards Yugoslavia, his homeland. As if an African-American living in Pennsylvania said he was proud of his Pennsylvanian homeland, and in 50 years Pennsylvania declares its independence from the U.S.A., and leads a 5-year long racist civil war after which all blacks are expelled from the state, and thrown out of Constitution. The original statement couldn't be used anymore with the same meaning, could it? Marechiel 11:44, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- I suggest you leave the politics out of this. It is also clear that after being proven wrong you are now trying to dispute this fact by some trivial rant. The fact is - Tesla considered Croatia to be his homeland and said it more than once(as I have cited). Afrika paprika
- No, he didn't. Read carefully the text above, and when you have finished, read it again. You can't use one single courteous personal note to shade his opinion made in public. Tesla considered Yugoslavia his homeland, and was against any kind of secession of Croatia from it (Tesla: Tribute to King Alexander. According to his wish, in the time WWII was waged in his conquered Yugoslavian homeland, the sounds of Tamo Daleko song played on his funeral (with the leading repeating verses: There's my village, there's Serbia ). (And please, stop insulting and deleting his Serbian reference, Tesla wouldn't like it - If I were happy enough to realize at least some of my ideas, they would benefit the whole mankind. If my hopes were to be fulfilled, my sweetest thought would be that it had been the work of a Serb). Marechiel 22:02, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
Nikola Tesla was SERBIAN! Not SERBIAN - AMERICAN. But SERBIAN! I don't care if he had USA citizenship, he went there when he was 28. He couldn’t even speak the freaking language at the time. He was born in Serbian Orthodox family, and grew up in Balkans. He only went in USA because he had conditions to work there, AND THAT IS IT!
- Tesla was ethnic Serbian USA citizen, therefore Serbian-American. Stating "Serbian" would imply that he was either Serbian citizen, or that he lived and worked in Serbia, which he did not and was not. He indeed does belong to Serbia and Serbs all and everywhere, but he was also an American and American patriot. Tesla was Serbian-American, and nothing can change that, neither ALL CAPITAL LETTERS, nor anyone's emotions and/or stubborness. Tesla was Serbian-American. Marechiel 13:57, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Tesla became USA citizen when he was like 30 or something. That DOES NOT make him a freaking American. How can someone be American, when he didn’t even know how to speak English at 28.!
- Being Serbian, means that he was an ethnic Serb, AND THAT’S IT He was born and grew up in today’s Croatia, then an Austrian-Empire. If the Austrian-Empire existed today, you could say that he was Serbian-Austrian. Since that country doesn’t exist anymore, he is Serbian and Serbian only.
- And you say "he was also an American and American patriot". How the hell do you know that he was American Patriot? You worked with him or something so you know that?
- I’m saying it again; he can NOT be American, if he went there when he was 28.! He only went in USA because he had conditions to work there. Being American means that he was born in America, or at least that he grew up there, or that he was “ethnic American”, but since being an “ethnic American” doesn’t exist, he is not an American!
- Who owes a scientist? This can be established by its ethnicity or place of origin or place of work.
- Unless Wikipedia is Serbian property it would be only correct to say that Tesla was Serbian/Croatian/American inventor. Pygmalion
- The Wikipedia Manual of Style says to refer to people as they refered to themselves. Since Tesla considered himself Serbian, he should be refered to as "Serbian" in this article. Case closed. For the record I am neither Serbian nor Croatian, nor do I give a flying flip about either. Kaldari 16:33, 11 September 2006 (UTC)
He cannot be called Croatian because he replied to Macek in a nice way and because it is the policy of Croatia today. It is isimly not enough. Ban Jelacic was born in Serbia (Austria at the time) and had great relations with Serbian people and opted for Yugoslavia. How would Croatians feel if the page on Jelacic started with " Ban Jelacic was born in Serbia and considered it his homeland"????
Tesla Motors
Heres a short Statement from the Teslamotors Company Site .. who designed and built an Electric Car, named "Tesla Roadster".
From: http://www.teslamotors.com/learn_more/why_tesla.php
The namesake of our Tesla Roadster is the genius Nikola Tesla, a Serbian-born American inventor, electrical engineer, and scientist. Among his life‘s many inventions (and over 700 patents) are the induction motor and alternating-current power transmission. Without Tesla‘s vision and brilliance, our car wouldn‘t be possible. We‘re confident that if he were alive today, Nikola Tesla would look over our car and nod his head with both understanding and approval.
A Bright Moment to Honor the Man Who Lit the World
UNESCO has declared 2006 the Year of Nikola Tesla, in celebration of the 150th anniversary of his birth. We are delighted that the world unveiling of the Tesla Roadster falls on July 19, 2006 — just days after his birthday.
“Were we to seize and eliminate from our industrial world the result 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, and our mills would be idle and dead. His name marks an epoch in the advance of electrical science.”
Tesla's height
I can't claim to know much at all about Nikola Tesla, but I was scrolling through the article List of famous tall men and he is listed as having been 6'7". Is this true? 70.50.53.38 22:24, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Serbs are often tall, and I remember reading he was of extraordinary height for his era; never saw the figure before, though.Skookum1 23:55, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
- That's the first I've ever heard of Serbs being tall. Does anyone know if there's proof for this claim of 6'7"? If not, he really shouldn't be on that list. 70.50.53.38 01:14, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
I read he was 6'6, he does look tall... and Serbs/Croats are the tallest people in the world!
Well Dalmatians are tall, but they ain't Serbs and Montenegrians are tall but they defintly aren't serbs. And yes, it's strange for a serb to be that tall.
First of all Tesla is not a Serb but was born in Croatian village of Smiljani near Croatian city of Gospic. Second of all serbs are not very tall nation. If any of the former Yugoslavian republics nationalities was tall than it was Monte Negrians.
- These are all silly remarks. Some nations may be shorter than others but we are talking about an individual here. The tallest player in the NBA is Chinese, and Svetozar Marovic, a Montenegrin who presided over Seria & Montenegro is something of a shortie (by Montenegrin standards). Now as for Dalmatians and Montenegrins not being Serbs, well, this is a two-fold argument. On principle, a Montenegrin may not be, however, a person from Montenegro may be Serb, and they are the largest ethnic minority in that country. Dalmatians mostly identify as such at a regional rather than national level, as such, the majority of Dalmatians are Croats, but there are Dalmatians who are Serb too, and another thing: the variation in height affects areas and not Slavic denominations: the fact that Montenegro has such a high average is attributed to all living within its borders, and ethnic Serbs are just as tall as ethnic Montenegrins. In Croatia, the same, in places where Serbs can trace their origins back for three centuries, their typical presence is closer to non-Serb locals than to Serbs living hundreds of kilometres away. Equally, Croats themselves vary in height from one place to another: Dalmatian Croats are said to be tall but in Zagorje, there are far fewer tall characters, by that I mean Serbs and Croats alike. Tesla has been claimed by both Serb and Croat nationalists; and moderates from both sides have also at various times conceded that he belongs to the other nation. His height cannot stand testimony but during his time in this world, both the Serbian and the Croatian modern national visions were born, so he could well have been either. We need to find evidence of how he defined himself before he assert what he was and what he wasn't. Evlekis 12:55, 16 January 2007 (UTC) Евлекис
Standing tall in fairness
I read somewhere that Montenegro has the tallest people in the world. Serbs and Croats are also fairly tall and that would make you wander "all 3 ethnic groups might share the same genetics and origins" I don't think Bosnians, Macedonians and Slovenes are as tall and might be more mixed with other ethnic groups. Interesting as people here are debating origin of Tesla. I would think there is enough evidence to support that he was a Vlah by origin(What's a Vlah today?. Not sure on the time line when these Vlah ancestors came to Croatia but they came to Croatia. His father was clearly as Serb. Confusing but clear. Tesla ancestors and last name were Vlah origin , but he was Serb as was his father, Tesla was born in what is Croatia today. FAIR ENOUGH
Jagoda 1 23:29, 7 September 2006 (UTC)
- For the same reasons as I pointed above, the similarily in genes will affect people living closest together, gradually becoming different as you move farther away. I believe that the region from where Tesla originated is renouned for its giants, indeed they will have close genetic links even if they self-identify as a seperate ethnic group. The term Vlah varies according to region; the only people to call themselves Vlah in the census are certain Romanian ethnic individual groups from certain areas; Croatia does have a traditional Romanian population in the shape of the Istro-Romanians and there is every reason why ones surname may be Romanian/Vlah or anything else in origin. Again I say, Tesla's father may have been Serb by declaration but one needs to be absolutely sure that Tesla himself identified as such. Evlekis 12:55, 16 January 2007 (UTC) Евлекис
Tesla's Poetry ?
In Margaret Cheney's book, she mentions that he was a good, and perhaps great, poet. I've never come across any of his work, and my Serbian friends - raised under Tito's regime - drew a blank on this, although they'd heard of his writings outside of engineering. Does this get mentioned in any of the other bios of him, and if so, is there any further detail? I understand he was also something of a musical aficionado, and I think a minor composer as well.....Skookum1 23:55, 23 July 2006 (UTC) Qualifying that, I remember that what she said was, other than his own poetry, he had written books or articles on Serbian poetry to good reviews...pr which were respected as knowledgeable or something to that effect. I haven't read the book in a long time....Skookum1 04:35, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Studies at Graz
The article under education says he received several degrees from Graz. Seifer, "Wizard.."p17 says he did not take his final exams senior degree and did not receive a degree from the school." So where is a verifiable source to prove he graduated from the Polytechnic at Graz with all the various degrees? Certainly he studied there, but more than one source says he did not receive a degree.Edison 03:52, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
- Seifer(op cit) says p17 " Exam time came, and Tesla was unprepared. He asked for an extension to study but was denied. He never graduated from the Austrian Polytechnic School and did not receive any grades for his last semester there." p18 says Tesla's father could not get him to return to Graz and complete his studies, so he started afresh at Charles-Ferdinand branch of the University of Pragus, for the summer term. This does not sound like "graduate studies" as stated in the article. He left after that term (p20) so it does not appear he obtained an undergraduate or graduate degree there either. Authorities Seifer cites for details of Tesla's college years include his roommate, Kosta Kulishich, "Tesla nearly missed his career as inventor; college roommate tells," Newark News, August 27, 1931 and also cites William Terbo, Tesla's great nephew, honorary chairman and cofounder of the Tesla Memorial Society, and life member of the International Tesla Society.Terbo in 1983 said it was likely Tesla was dismissed for gambling and womanizing. In the Wiki article is a citation to Wysock et al which states he got the degree at Graz; the Wysock article does not provide a citation as to how they knew this fact. Perhaps someone could in Newark could verify the Newark News article. Did Tesla in any writing of his own ever claim to have graduated? Does anyone have access to the Tesla Museum to see if they have a diploma among the many volumes of documents Tesla kept? Does Graz Polytech still exist and do they say Tesla graduated? Even without the formal degree, he was better educated in physics than many 19th century electrical authorities. Pending verifiable sources for graduation, the article shoud state that he attended college but did not graduate (like Bill Gates!).Edison 15:50, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
The articles does NOT state that he recieved a PhD, Edison ... only that he studied in graduate school. It states "Graduate studies" ... not "Graduate degree". The article does state that he attended college but did not graduate (atleast not in the time frame of his early years). This is your misinterpertation of the words. Did you misunderstand "studies" for "degree"? There is only Bachelor diplomas, no PhD.
He did though recieve Docteur Honorius Causa (Honorary doctorate) at
- Yale University,
- University of Paris,
- Columbia University,
- Vienna Polytechnic Institute,
- University de Poitiers,
- University of Beograd,
- Graz Polytechnic Institute,
- University of Brno,
- University of Zagreb,
- Polytechnic Institute of Bucharest,
- University of Grenoble,
- University of Sophia,
- University of Prague
- etc ...
The Wysock article (with the Corums) is one of the best on his background. The Corums are have a vast knowledge on Tesla's background. I would imagine the Corums have met William Terbo in person (all have delivered papers at Tesla symposiums)
The article should stand as it is, the misunderstanding is yours not the articles.
134.193.168.250 17:17, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Sorry you misread what I actually wrote. I did NOT say that the article stated that he received a PhD from Prague. The article incorrectly (or without documentation) says he was a graduate student at Prague, which would imply he had received a baccalaureate at Graz, which he did not. Repeat: Tesla left Graz then "Kaiserlich-königlich Technischen Hochschule" in Graz, without receiving any diploma. He "started afresh" per Seifer, his undergraduate studies at Prague, unless he attended the one summer semesster as a special graduate student without an undergraduate degree. The Corum article is simply wrong, and contains no source for its claim he received a bachelor's degree from Graz. The Wikipedia article is five times wrong when it claims he received 5 baccalaureate degrees from Graz. Later, he received lots of honorary doctorates, including one from Graz (then called "Technische (und Montanistische) Hochschule Graz - Leoben") in 1937. He was very well self-educated outside his college studies, and his college studies such as they were were more extensive than those of many famous 19th century electrical researchers. So when he "made a fresh start" at Prague, he was still an undergraduate. In fact, he did not go beyond the first semester of his junior year at the Polytechnic School of Graz, per a book they published in honor of the 150th anniversary of his birth, "Nikola Tesla und die Technik in Graz" by Jozef W. Wohinz (hg.),Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz, 2006; ISBN-10: 3-902465-39-5; ISBN-13: 978-3-902465-39-9. He started at Graz in the fall semester of 1875. In his third year, the last registration information for Tesla says: "Wegen Nichtbezahlung des Unterrichtgeldes für das I. Semester 1877/78 gestrichen". In English, he was dismissed for nonpayment of his tuition for the first semester of his junior year. This is even earlier than what Seifer said, but the Graz University of Technology is certainly the most credible source for info on who graduated.Edison 17:18, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
Article states that Tesla studied alternating current at Graz. I thought this was the basis of his feud with Edison, that AC did not exist in 1875. Someone who knows for sure please clarify. Thanks.
- Please sign your postings with 4 tildes. In the 1875-1876 schoolyear at Graz, Tesla took 11 courses, for a total of 46 hours of credit. He received a grade of “vorzüglich” for each course, corresponding to A+ in U.S. grading. He took "Experimentalphysik" for 5 hours with Prof. Jakob Pöschl, the chair of the physics department, and thereby learned an excellent coverage of electrical physics. He apparently took another physics course with Pöschl in his second year.Pöschl purchased a small Gramme machine which was the first reasonably good motor and generator, and which impressed Thomas Edison as well, inspiring his motor-generator development. A generator is basically a loop of wire rotating in a magnetic field, or a stationary loop of wire with a rotating magnet, and naturally tends to produce alternating current. The Gramme machine was a state of the art motor or generator, with a series of coils embedded in a soft iron ring, which rotated in a magnetic field. By having a series of loops, a nearly continuous current was produced. I see this as the inspiration for Tesla's motors and generators with the rotating magnetic field. A commutator connected to each coil in turn to keep the current always flowing in the same direction. Tesla saw that the commutator produced sparking and a loss of efficiency, and suggested doing away with the brushes. So the DC machine of Gramme in the physics class was the inspiratiuuon for his AC concepts, but it was not used as an AC machine. AC generation, transmission, and use was not taught in the class, except in the sense that AC is the natural result of a simple coil rotating in a field, or a magnet going in and out of a coil. Edison 15:54, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
Please stop reverting to your version of this article. The Nobel claims have been discussed at great length, and it is extremely unlikely that what you are writing is correct. Your changes to the school portions would require a citation. The current text already has a citation there, and changing it creates problems with that citation. In addition, please stop using devious methods to revert. --Philosophus T 18:01, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
I have the book in the citations. The text in the books does not match the citations of the article. Moving this to Talk: NT. 134.193.168.250
- Ok, that makes sense for the school part. But the Nobel part doesn't seem right. Nominations are not made public, and most of the information there is just pure speculation. --Philosophus T 18:37, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Tesla was Serbian-American, what seems to be the problem with it?
Tesla has lived in the USA since he was 28 until the end of his life, had the USA citizenship, and was by no doubt American. Being an ethnic Serb, he belonged to the numerous Serbian-American community, which exists today as well. Some people (Croatians?) seem not to understand the term Serbian-American and keep deleting it: it means primarily American, while the Serbian part is the ethnic reference, like Italian-American, African-American, Native-American etc. Although Tesla was a proud American, he also cherished his Serbdom, Serbian language and Serbian/Yugoslavian connections, and contributed much to the Serbian-American community in the USA. Marechiel 12:05, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
You americans... hmm think you own everything... There is no american scientist so you would like to have them all... yes i know.. "we are the best, so f... the rest" -> this is your culture.
- IIRC, Tesla was also at pains to the ethnic rivalry and civil strife that existed in his homeland. Mabey something to put into the personal views if a few refs can be found. 134.193.168.253 17:17, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- This is a another topic that has little to do with his ethnicity and nationality, which was Serbian-American. Tesla was one of the founders of Serbian-American community and a person whose name is cherished the most by the already mentioned Serbian-American community. Considering his political views, Tesla was a supporter of King Alexander's ideas, and a supporter of young King Peter II and his Chetniks during WWII (Tesla&KingPeter.jpg), as the whole USA were at the time, but this is a another topic. See this: Tesla: Tribute to King Alexander (MS Word Document). Marechiel 19:23, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- Yep ... this is a another topic, but it does deal with his ethnicity and nationality (which was Serbian-American). It (his views on his homeland) would be a good thing to cover in the personal views section. 134.193.168.253 19:51, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
3rr violation - Tesla and Croatian language
Someone keeps deleting the statement that Tesla spoke Croatian, amomg his 8 languages. They would have us believe that he grew up in Croatia, but never learned to speak the language, although he learned to speak several languages of places he never lived. This is vandalism. Tesla wrote in a letter to the New York Times, October 21, 1934, p E5, "Tribute to King Alexander" the following: "The fact is that all Yugoslavians- Serbians,Slavonians, Bosnians, Herzegovinians, Dalmatians, Montenegrins, Croatians and Slovenes- are of the same race, speak the same language and have common ideals and traditions."..."I was born in Croatia. The Croatians and Slovenes were never in a position to fight for their independence. It was the Serbians who fought the battles for freedom and the price of liberty was paid in Serbian blood. All true Croatians and Slovenes remember that gratefully." Is the claim then that he did not speak Croatian because it is the identical language with Serbian? There is a Wikipedia article on Croatian language which says that the Croatian and Serbian languages were forced to be one (mostly Serbian) by the Kingdom of Serbia starting 1918, then the Nazi puppet state of Croatia emphasized linguistic separatism starting 1941. Thus it appears that Tesla would have had no difficulty making himself understood in Croatian, and that Croatian was during much his lifetime considered a separate language. A Maître'D at the St. Regis Hotel in New York stated that he conversed with Tesla in Croatian "The very model of a Maître 'dHotel" NY Times, Feb 19, 1967, p.78. I have provided verifiable sources that Tesla said he was born in Croatia, that Croatia was a language during his lifetime, and that he spoke it. Now the question is how do I not violate the 3RR while adding Croatian back to the article as one of his languages?? The violator of 3RR would seem to be the deletor unless they furnish a verifiable source that a) there was no such language, or b) he was unable to speak it. If it would make the other editor happy, I would settle for the article stating he spoke Serbo-Croatian among 7 languages. I will make such a change. Edison 18:25, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
- No, this is most likely not vandalism. Vandalism consists of an change that is "a deliberate attempt to reduce the quality of the encyclopedia". While the edits may be decreasing the quality of the encyclopedia, they do not appear to me to be a deliberate attempt to do so. --Philosophus T 10:52, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
This is a political issue, and can and should be, in my opinion, be solved making a compromise. I beg for this whole article of mine to be read, in order to make the right conclusion.
Serbian and Croatian are basically not only the same language, but the same very dialect of that language: stokavian. The only difference is that "Croatian" de facto also includes the two other dialects not spoken in Serbia, and "Serbian" a subdialect spoken in Eastern Serbia, and not Croatia. But what we call today standard Serbian and standard Croatian are one same language, 100% mutually intelligible. Now to the Tesla issue:
Tesla by his own admission spoke Serbian. But, to be fair, the same variant/accent spoken by Croats, Croatian Serbs and ex-Croatian Serbs (regugees) is called Serbian by Serbs, and Croatian by Croats. Tesla explicitly said that this were one language (See Edison's quote above), and Tesla never called it Croatian - as all Serbs from his region never do - but Serbian. Tesla did not speak two Balkanic/SE-European languages, or three, or four, but one, his mother tongue he called "Serbian", and what was at the called "Serbian", "Croatian", "Serbian or Croatian" and "Serbo-Croatian".
If we were to be 100% truthful, we should also add Bosnian and Bosniak (language of Bosniaks in Sanjak, Serbia), and the other two languages: Montenegrin and Bunjevacki, because Tesla spoke them all: the same variant of Serbian, only called differently, after Croats, Bosniaks, Montenegrins and Bunjevci who speak it. Where would this lead, and what would this do?
I suggest not placing Croatian among Tesla's languages - because he didn't call it that, and because he de facto knew eight languages, and not nine, or ten, or eleven, depending on what we now divide into something he called "Serbian". I suggest as a rightful compromise that Croatian, Bosnian, Montenegrin and Bunjevacki should be added as a reference, or in brackets, next to Serbian. It should also be unjust to late Tesla not to call his language the way he and his countrymen did. Marechiel 13:50, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Marechiel: The above is informative to thos of us who know not a word of the language. If I understand you correctly, it is the custom of Serbians born in Croatia to say they speak Serbian while Croatians born next door and speaking the same language say they speak Croatian. It seems as artificial to argue over whether he spoke Serbian or Croatian then as to claim that George Bush speaks 'Texan' or 'Connecticuttese' when both are mutually intelligible variants of American English. Is it offensive to both sides to say he spoke "Serbo-Croatian" or if that is offensive, "the Serbian and Croatian language" and count it as one language in the total? To a neutral observer seems like the obvious answer. And in the comment for your last edit you said "(Tesla was not born in Croatia, Croatian state didn't exist until Tesla was 85)" but in the letter above written when he was 78, he said he was born in Croatia. Wikipedia would usually take a person's own statement as the best source. Earlier he wrote he was born in Smiljan, Lika, in the Austro-Hungarian border territory. Is that not also correct? No one is saying he travelled through time to the modern Croatian state to be born (though some of his fans might think that not impossible!).Edison 14:48, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- The article on differences in standard Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian uses the term Serbo-Croatian to jointly refer to the language - as I know nothing other than what I read since reading the above (and knowing there was a contoversy on the mailing list regarding this) - is that term, Serbo-Croatian, potentially offensive? --Trödel 15:36, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Edison: You got the idea about language totally right. I think that it is not a problem to name the language in any appropriate way, but it is just false to say that he spoke more than eight languages (Serbian + other seven), since one language named in many ways doen't make several languages. Also, to be fair, when stating Croatian, one should also add Bosnian and Montenegrin, since those "languages" are more close to Lika speech than the official Zagreb variant, today called standard Croatian.
- Considering the place of Tesla's birth, it is obvious that when he mentions Croatia (or Serbia, or Montenegro etc.) he speaks of it as of region in an ethnic Yugoslav area. The idea of King Alexander was that Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (at the time, Montenegrins, Bosniaks, Bunjevci and Macedonians weren't recognized as separate peoples) were just tribal names for the same Yugoslav nation, which Tesla whole heartily accepted. At the time, Serbs lived throughout Croatia, and app. one third of Croatian territory was ethnically Serbian, including Tesla's Lika. Whenever Tesla spoke of Croatia, he spoke of it as a Serbo-Croat region in their mutual state, and not as independent state of ethnic Croats, which it is today.
- Beside everything, for the sake of historical accuracy, Tesla's birhtplace was in Austrian Empire at the time, and today it is part of Croatian state - I simply don't see why this should be a problem, save for political motives to present Tesla as Croatian "brand". As I previously said, Archimedes wasn't born in Italy, Heraclites wasn't born in Turkey and - similar example to Tesla - Tesla's contemporary and fellow-countryman and a colegue scientist, Michael Idvorsky Pupin, Serbian scientist from the USA, also born in Austria, but in the region called Voivodship Serbia isn't stated as born in Serbia, although he was a Serb, and not a member of of an ethnic minority Serbs had a war with, as Croats had in Croatia. Should we mention the Croatia-Slavonia region in Austria as a place of his birth, we should also say that Croatia-Slavonia was a part of Kingdom Hungary, and that Smiljan was at the time part of Military Frontier, a separate region, only later joined with Croatia-Slavonia. See Map of Hungary at the time of Tesla's birth. "HORVÁT-SZLAVONORSZÁG" stands for Croatia-Slavonia, part of Kingdom Hungary of Austrian Empire, while the darkened region is the Military Krajina, subjugated directly to Wienna, Austria. Marechiel 15:59, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Trödel: I can't speak on behalf of everyone, but I personally don't find "Serbo-Croatian" or "Serbian or Croatian" offensive to any party, although Tesla called it "Serbian", because it is practically the same language. Should people object and find it offensive, I suggest a compromise of not stating the name of the language, but rephrasing the sentence as: 'Beside his mother tongue, Tesla also spoke' etc. Marechiel 15:59, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
Edison's edits?
I'm not sure of what POV edison is trying to push, but the following links may be of use to everyone.
See:
- Technical University of Graz (german wikipedia; google translated article)
- Nikola Tesla: A pioneer of electro-technology (fstgss16.tu-graz.ac.at, 1875 to 1878)
- Who's who in America
- Great Inventors edited by Phyllis Goldman
- "Our Foreign-born Citizens: What They Have Done for America" by Annie E. S. Beard - 1922 - 288 pages (Page 285; NIKOLA TESLA ... In 1880 he went to the University in Prague.
- Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla, page 18-19.
- The Book of New York: Forty Years' Recollections of the American Metropolis (snippet) [says he matriculated with 4 degrees (physics, mathematics, mechanical engineering and electrical engineering) and studied at the University of Prague (philosophical studies, 2 years).
- etc ...
For some reason, Edison is trying to imping the validity of the W.C. Wysock, J.F. Corum, J.M. Hardesty and K.L. Corum paper. The paper states:
- matriculated with degrees in mathematics, mechanical engineering and electrical engineering) and at the University of Prague (where he performed graduate studies in Physics).
There is no confusion except apparantly in Edison's mind.
204.56.7.1 15:50, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
You may want to looks at ""MY INVENTIONS", III. My Later Endeavors: The Discovery of the Rotating Magnetic Field. He talks about his schoolin in this book. 204.56.7.1 16:10, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Greetings to the anonymous editor who posted the above from a common terminal at a library: You, or those who share the terminal you use, share my interest in early radio and electronics. But-Your attacks and assertion I am "pushing a POV" are unwarranted and are inappropriate for Wikipedia. This is not a blog. I just want accurate information in the article.
- Please see the above section in Talk:Nikola Tesla entitled "Studies at Graz" which documents that Tesla did not finish his undergraduate studies at Technical University of Graz.
- The fact that an error has been perpetuated by authors or websites does not make it convincing, when the school itself will tell you the opposite, and have said so on page 16 of the book they published to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Teslas birth, "Wohinz, Josef W.(Ed.): Nikola Tesla und die Technik in Graz. Graz, Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz, 2006, p.16; ISBN -10: 3-902465-39-5; ISBN -13: 978-3-902465-39-9".
- At the school's website you will find at http://www.presse.tugraz.at//pressemitteilungen/2006/16.05.2006_graz.htm the following:
- "Nikola Tesla kam zu Beginn des Studienjahres 1875/76 nach Graz und schrieb sich als Student der damaligen „k.k. Technischen Hochschule“ ein, die ursprünglich räumlich im Stammhaus des Landesmuseum Joanneum, in der Raubergasse 10, untergebracht war und mit der Eröffnung des neu errichteten Hauptgebäudes 1888 in die Rechbauerstraße 12 übersiedelte. Zur Zeit Teslas wurden wesentliche Inhalte aus der heutigen Elektrotechnik von Physikern vorgetragen. Erst 1940 wurde an der Technischen Hochschule in Graz eine Abteilung für Elektrotechnik eingerichtet.Überdurchschnittliche Leistungen
- Nikola Tesla wies im ersten Studienjahr eine weit überdurchschnittliche Leistung nach, hat er doch elf verschiedene Vorlesungen mit insgesamt 46 Stunden absolviert. Im zweiten schloss er nur mehr fünf Lehrveranstaltungen (mit insgesamt 19 Stunden) positiv ab und wurde im dritten Studienjahr schließlich wegen Nichtbezahlung des Unterrichtsgeldes aus dem Katalog gestrichen. Es zeigt sich im Verlauf seines Lebens immer wieder, dass Tesla wenig Geschick im Umgang mit Geld hatte – wirtschaftlich schwierige Phasen kennzeichnen seinen Lebensweg trotz einer Vielzahl erfolgreicher Erfindungen."
- Doesn't this mean Tesla was a student at the "Kaiserlich-königlich Technischen
- Hochschule in Graz (now Graz University of Technology) from 1875 til
- 1878. In the third year (1877/78), "Wegen Nichtbezahlung des Unterrichtgeldes für das I. Semester 1877/78 gestrichen", his tuition was not paid and his studies did not continue. They gave him an honorary doctorate in 1937. Do you read it differently, or do you find where the University says more than "he studied there from the beginning of the 1875-1876 term until 1878?"
- Please also see the book you mentioned by Seifert, "Wizard." which also documents on page 17 that he did not finish his studies and did not receive a bacalaureate degree from Graz.
- Does he say in "My Inventions" that he graduated? And as for "imping" the validity of Corum et al, I stated they said Tesla received all those undergraduate degrees from Graz, but that they do not provide a source for their information. Who's Who says he "completed" the engineering course at Graz, in disagreement with the schools records, but does not say he received a B.S. Their source is not given. Tesla or some anonymous writer at Who's Who?
- How about you doing doing the reverting to the previous version, which says he did not graduate, or you providing a better source such as a diploma on deposit in some museum, or a statement in Tesla's own writings that he received an undergraduate degree from Graz, in addition to the honorary doctorate they gave him decades later? Or do you want a section that says he received all those bachelors degrees and then a section that says the University denies it, and his roommate denied he graduated? Edison 21:52, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
The school's website is a page of Josef W. Wohinz's opionion. It is dubious. "Who's Who" is much more reputable source (though, it seem, you don't agree with it). The sources for Corum et al is at the end of their paper. There is a whole citation section. Which is better than one opinion at a website (reguardless that it's jhosted on the school domain; any of the staff or stu8dent can get a page there).
- As to Seifert ("Wizard"), though it is one of the better modern biographies, it does sdtill have Seifert's opinions sprinkled throughout (such as his opinion on the photograph of Tesla and Einstein and Steinmetz; Seifert believe that it was not Tesla, but there are other biographers that do). He did recieve degree from these schools. You should not misrepresent what teh reputable reference says and choose only those references that you like. 134.193.168.252 17:05, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
By the way, Anonymous Editor "204.56.7.1" which is the IP of a terminal at Linda Hall Library, "in the heart of the University of Missouri-Kansas City's campus but separate from the University", the previous discussion you were unfamiliar with was with another Anonymous Editor "134.193.168.250" at the selfsame University of Missouri - Kansas City. You "two" should get together. I bet you could have some great discussions about Tesla.Edison 22:51, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
- Edison seem to be a impartial name to edit the Nikola Tesla article. Real impartial. 134.193.168.252 17:05, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
- The user name Edison reflects a lifelong interest and study of 19th century electrical technology, as well as a degree in and career in electrical engineering. For that matter, anonymous edits are not very compelling in their authenticity.Edison 14:11, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
Went to the library and checked "My Inventions" by Tesla. He does not claim to have graduated from or recieved a Bachelor's degree from Graz. His second year of studies would have been 1876-1877. On p 58 he says "It was in the second year of my studies that we received a Gramme dynamo..." and there follows his account of devising the brushless ac motor concept in Prod Poeschl's physics class. Then he talks about his further thoughts about the ac motor. Then (p 59) he says, and note that "term" is singular, "All my remaining term in Gratz was passed in intense but fruitless efforts of this kind, and I almost came to the conclusion that the problem was insoluble. In 1880 I went to Prague, Bohemia, carrying out my father's wish to complete my education at the University there." Note that he never said he graduated from Graz. Nor did he state that he received any degree from Prague. Please do not misrepresent what a reference says. Tesla accomplished a great deal in his life, and does not need people padding his resumé.Edison 01:57, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
- Note that "term" is about the time of development of the motor, not about the length of his overall study. From 1876 to 1880 is the time of his stay. Note that he never said he did not graduated from Graz. He was to undertake his graduate studies at the Prague University. You should not misrepresent what a reference says and choose only those references that you like. Tesla accomplished a great deal in his life, and does not need people removing items from his resumé! 134.193.168.252
To Anonymous Editor "204.56.7.1" I see that you have partially reverted the education section by putting back the discredited claim that Tesla received numerous undergraduate degrees from Graz. I also see that you have been blocked numerous times for repeated 3RR reverts. The university records show that he stopped going to class junior year and did not graduate from Graz. Here is one more nail in the coffin: In the article, one of the sources under "External Articles: History and family" is Mrkich, D., "Tesla - The European Years", Serb National Federation at Tesla - The European Years", Serb National Federation. Mrkich in his book, available online, says he went to Graz in October, 2001. He asked the university officials about Tesla's time there, and says he was was shown Tesla's official school records, which show (pp 2 and 11) that he took no exams in his third year. Mrkich says "In his third year, the fall of 1877, Tesla stopped attending lecture, and in January 1878 is not a registered student anymore." Mrkick says, p 2, "Nikola Tesla, the world's greatest mind in the age of machinery, never graduated from any school of higher learning." Against this you present secondary (tertiary?) sources such as websites which cite no source for their info, and you cited in support of the claim for numerous undergraduate degrees some sources which actually say he DID NOT graduate, ambiguous cites that he "completed his studies" which he certainly did on the last day he attended with or without a degree, and a "postersession" by Corum et al, which it is hard to see how it constitutes a refereed scholarly verifiable source, and which in turn cites no authoritative source to show he graduated. The repeated posting of the numerous claimed baccalaureate degrees is not appropriate without some evidence to tip the scales against the evidence from the school, from his roommate, and from his great-nephew as cited above.Thanks for leaving in the article something of the arguments I presented to show his nongraduation. But the list of degrees should be removed, since it is undocumented, and the evidence he did NOT graduate is very well documented.Edison 16:59, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
The source you cite other than the unreferenced claim by Corum et al is " The Book of New York ,"Publisher: The Book of New York Company Author(s): Julius Chambers Publication Date: 1912. In the snippet whic appears when I click on this source in the article, it just says he studied at Graz for four years, but does not say he "matriculated" with four degrees as claimed in the not, unless that is on some other place in the book. Page number?? Also, when I click on the matriculate link it says the term refers to ENTERING a cource of study, not graduating. So it is misleading to use this as support for the claim he received 4 bachelors degrees from Graz.Edison 17:23, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
Tesla in Colorado Springs
If I remember right, didn't NT burned out and fixed the power station in Manitou Springs when powering his lab in CS? I believe I read this in one of the more well known NT bios but forgot which one. Please let me know if this is the case.
Recognition and honors
I'm still trying to clean up this section, which has grown a bit awkward. I've already refined artistic categories, moved documentary films from this section to the Further Readings section, and relocated a few works of fiction which were in Further Reading to Recognition and honors. However, I'm not fully satisfied. I can think of two different approaches:
- Creating a new root section called "Tesla in fiction" and moving the content under literature and Cinema, television and drama to it. Music would remain a subsection of Recognition and honors, since it's not fiction, or is it?
- Creating a new root section called "Tesla in popular culture" and moving Literature, Music and Cinema, television and drama to it. Recognition and honors would then be limited to scientific or official honors.
Any preference or suggestion? Orphu of Io 15:19, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
- It is rather pointless to try to list every occurance of Nikola Telsa in popular culture, as anyone as prominent as Tesla is going to appear in countless ephemera. You might as well try to list every appearance of Albert Einstien in popular culture. Such lists, though popular in Wikipedia, are not at all encyclopedic. They are typically unverified, have no threshold for notability, and are generally formatted as lists of random trivia, none of which are appropriate for an encyclopedia article. This article will be much better off without such a list, as it only serves as a magnet for trivia. Kaldari 00:07, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- I agree that the quality of the current content is very unequal. Also, I don't think that listing every weapon called "Tesla something" in a videogame is relevant to the article. Maybe a threshold for notability should indeed be established?
- For example, Tesla would have to be a central character or inspiration for a work to be mentionned in the list. More remote connections would be only be evoked through generalization. Finally, items otherwise accessible through the wikipedia search engine should be avoided.
- But still, you are right about the "trivia magnet" effet. Even if the section is rewritten according to stricter rules, it will probably eventually grow back to a list of trivia... I think we've effectively reached the limits of the wikipedian model here. Random trivia should ideally be accessible, but via pages automatically generated by search engine queries, not as part of a human-maintained article. Orphu of Io 17:58, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- Another benefit of removing the pop culture section is that it drops the overall article length from 77K to 69K. Any articles over 32K are labelled "LONG" in the Good Article evaluation list (which this article is currently on). Thus 77K would be considered really, really, long :) Kaldari 18:55, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- Someone has added all of the pop-culture trivia back into the article. I'm afraid this article will never be featured article material with so much cruft. Kaldari 05:51, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- As it seems some people are determined to keep the cruft in the article, I have at least moved it into a separate Trivia section, as it didn't make any sense being in the Recognition and honors section. Kaldari 07:06, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- Why not moving it Nikola Tesla/in pop culture or just leaving it? There are much much longer biographical articles than this one Isaac Newton's had to be divided into several others. Look at Leibniz's article too. There's an entire section devoted to Einstein in popular culture in his article. It's not a big deal. Trivia is popular on wikipedia. We have articles devoted to cartoon episodes and characters and those articles are being kept. 72.144.103.32 16:04, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
- And guess why Leibniz is still rated B-class - it's too long, see the comments page. I think it would be fine to split off the trivia cruft, although I imagine such a subarticle would be deleted before long. Do you really think that the fact that Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark released a single called "Tesla Girls" belongs in an encyclopedia article about Tesla? Obviously not. If you want to add cruft like that, start a Telsa fan club with it's own website where you can list every song and toy gun named after Tesla. Kaldari 17:20, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
- Why not moving it Nikola Tesla/in pop culture or just leaving it? There are much much longer biographical articles than this one Isaac Newton's had to be divided into several others. Look at Leibniz's article too. There's an entire section devoted to Einstein in popular culture in his article. It's not a big deal. Trivia is popular on wikipedia. We have articles devoted to cartoon episodes and characters and those articles are being kept. 72.144.103.32 16:04, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
- As it seems some people are determined to keep the cruft in the article, I have at least moved it into a separate Trivia section, as it didn't make any sense being in the Recognition and honors section. Kaldari 07:06, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- Someone has added all of the pop-culture trivia back into the article. I'm afraid this article will never be featured article material with so much cruft. Kaldari 05:51, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- Another benefit of removing the pop culture section is that it drops the overall article length from 77K to 69K. Any articles over 32K are labelled "LONG" in the Good Article evaluation list (which this article is currently on). Thus 77K would be considered really, really, long :) Kaldari 18:55, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- It is rather pointless to try to list every occurance of Nikola Telsa in popular culture, as anyone as prominent as Tesla is going to appear in countless ephemera. You might as well try to list every appearance of Albert Einstien in popular culture. Such lists, though popular in Wikipedia, are not at all encyclopedic. They are typically unverified, have no threshold for notability, and are generally formatted as lists of random trivia, none of which are appropriate for an encyclopedia article. This article will be much better off without such a list, as it only serves as a magnet for trivia. Kaldari 00:07, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- The whole lot was removed on the 30th so I've grabbed it all and moved it to Nikola Tesla in popular culture - there are a lot of legitimate appearances that do need noting but we do need to make sure it is kept trimmed down. (Emperor 14:16, 12 October 2006 (UTC))
Place of birth
In the time when Tesla was born, the village where he was born belonged to the Military Frontier province of the Austrian Empire. This province was governed directly from Vienna and was not part of what was then Croatia. Area was included in Croatia in 1882 and Tesla was born in 1856, thus I hope that some people here are able to understand this simple historical fact. PANONIAN (talk) 17:09, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
Birth
- The proof is in your history book for elementary school. I hope you had one? PANONIAN (talk) 15:27, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Tesla's work at Niagara Falls and the missing papers
The article contains no mention whatsoever to Tesla's work for generating power from the Niagara Falls. It was a childhood wish that came true for him.
Also, I think Tesla's missing papers should be mentioned more thoroughly. --Jambalaya 10:33, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
Edit war regarding nationality information in the intro
This edit war is not helpful. Please discuss your positions below and attempt to reach a consensus. If everyone can agree to do that at least, I will lift the protection. Disclaimer: The protection of a page on any particular version is not meant to express support for that version. Kaldari 07:19, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- I'm tentatively unprotecting, since apparently no one cares any more. If you want to change any information about Tesla's nationality, please discuss it here before editing the article. Kaldari 14:50, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Admin: Please fix redirect comment (as its protected)
The article says "Tesla" redirects here, but in fact Tesla redirects to the unit Tesla (unit). — Dark Shikari talk/contribs 13:54, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Tremendous work
Due to my lack of familarity with the scientific nature of Tesla's work, I don't feel comfortable reviewing it for GA. (Especially when it comes to assesment of WP:V and NPOV). However, I will say that I was thoroughly impressed with this article. I felt that the prose flowed well with nothing overtly technical that couldn't be answered with the corresponding wiki-link. After reading the article, I felt more knowledgeable and enriched--which is obviously a nice mark for a very informative piece. Kudos to the article's editors. :) Agne 17:05, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
- A lot of good edits have added to the article, but there is way too much nationalistic edit-warring and ethnic boosterism:"world-renowned" "one of the most important inventors in history" "well known" "Tesla's fame rivaled that of any other inventor or scientist in history or popular culture.""he was widely respected as America's greatest electrical engineer" "many of his discoveries were of groundbreaking importance" all lack citations, and detract greatly from the quality of the article. If the article had only accolades which came from books, speeches, awards ceremonies, or eulogies, the article woud be greatly improved. He won 2 major awards, and was widely praised at his funeral and in books from major publishers. Find where quotes similar to the ones above can be attributed to scientists and other leaders and the article will improve in quality and have a better chance of becoming a featured article. I think it can be shown that he was extremely important to AC electricity development and high frequency electricity including X-rays, and to radio remote control from 1882 to 1900, after which he drifted off into mad scientist mode, except for his high speed turbine invention around 1906. Eddy Kurentz 17:28, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
GAC
I evaluated the article based on 7 criteria:
- Well-written: Pass
- Factually accurate: Pass
- Broad: Pass
- Neutrally written: Pass
- Stable: Pass
- Well-referenced: Pass
- Images: Pass
Congratualtions, it passes! As opposed to the person above, I feel comfortable reviewing this article precisely because I don't know much about him, other than the technical side. This is a wonderful article, and I heavily encourage the editors involved to try to push it to Featured Article status. --PresN 22:43, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
- If you don't know enough about the subject, how can you tell it's "factually accurate" or "neutrally written"? Have you taken into account the information that is not in the article or what's in the article? --Jambalaya 14:57, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
Tesla discovers X-rays?!
I find it odd that there's not much discussion of one of Tesla's little-known accomplishments: the discovery of x-rays.
Is this timeline correct?
* Tesla mentions discovering a new form of radiation, keeps it secret, but does make photos of bones in his hand * His research is destroyed when his lab burns down on March 13, 1985 * Roentgen discovers "x-rays" on November 8, 1985 * Tesla makes no claims, but he does send Roentgen a glass photography plate taken from the remains of his burned lab: a photo of human hand w/visible bones
- I seriously doubt that Tesla sent Röntgen anything in 1985, as Tesla died in 1945, and Röntgen died in 1923. Perhaps you're referring to the 5th Avenue lab fire of March 1895, instead? :-) If so, it sounds plausable, but you'd want to find a citation before adding, to avoid the ire of the crowd. ◉ ghoti 19:29, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
- Lol Obviously my typo. I forgot to "save page" after preview. Yes, Roentgen announced the discovery of x-rays in 1895 and not 1985. I've fixed it above. but you'd want to find a citation before adding. More than one Tesla book mentions this issue, in particular "Tesla: Master of Lightning" pp74-75. Also, already the current WP Tesla entry states that Tesla started working with x-rays in 1882 and says that Tesla became aware of them specifically in 1892 (probably in reference to "On light and other high frequency phenomena" lecture at the IEE and Royal Society lecture of 1892.) So the photos recovered from the 1895 fire show that Tesla apparently was making x-ray photographs a half a year before Roentgen at the very least. In other words, Tesla discovered x-ray photography, then sat on the discovery. (This is a common difference between scientists and inventors. Inventors keep secrets. Scientists publish, and they publish fast before others beat them to the punch.) --Wjbeaty 23:05, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
- I've un-done the changes to your original post so that folks reading this will have a clue what we're talking about. If you've got these specifics, including titles, page and ISBN numbers, then go ahead, be bold and add the information, with references. ◉ ghoti 03:55, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
- This topic is probably Original Research. But I'm still thinking. There's a big problem: the book "Prodigal Genius" mentions that in 1892 when Tesla was experimenting with HV single-electrode vacuum tubes, he claimed to have discovered "light, black light, and a very special radiation." The same book says that before the lab fire, Tesla using this "special radiation" to produce shadowgraphs on film contained in metal boxes. And the book "Tesla: Master of Lightning" says that Tesla had made an accidental shadowgraph of a human foot in a high-lace shoe which was recovered from the rubble of the 1895 fire. Yet in his 1897 lecture "On the Streams of Lenard and Roentgen With Novel Apparatus for Their Use," Tesla very definitely stepped aside and let Roentgen have the credit for x-rays. Knowing what we know of Tesla's prior shadowgraphs of human bones, it appears that Tesla was being either polite or dishonest in concealing his own discovery. Polite, in not stealing Roentgen's thunder, and dishonest in not letting the physics community find out the embarassing fact that Tesla had discovered x-rays months (years?) previously, but had kept the discovery hidden from other scientists. --Wjbeaty 05:36, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
- If Tesla did not show any witness his invention, did not apply for a patent, and did not write about it, he could have been accused of fakery if he came forward after he heard of Roentgen's work and said he had invented it first. He had too much class to want to look like a false claimant. Eddy Kurentz 17:35, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Semi-protection
I'm trying to decide whether or not to remove the semi-protection on this article. Normally semi-protection should only be used for a short period of time, although exceptions are made for articles that are subject to long-term edit wars or vandalism problems. The semi-protection on this article seems to be doing a good job of reducing the edit-warring that the article was subject to previously. It seems that most of the disruption was coming from IP accounts who were only interested in a pro-Serbain or pro-Croatian POV, and not actually interested in the quality of the article. What do other people think? Is it time to remove the semi-protection or is it serving a useful purpose? Kaldari 17:26, 19 September 2006 (UTC)
I honestly do not understand the debate about Tesla's nationality/ethicity. The man himself has said numerous times that he is a Serb, and he was born in then heavily Serbian populated region known as Vojina Krajna, part of Austrian empire. Croatia as a state did not exist until the rescent dissolution of SFRJ. By comparison, Serbia has had some form of kingdom/state since the early 12th century, and rescent findings push that timeline back three centuries. Granted, Ottoman empire conquered the region during 15th century, which caused Serb populations to dispurse accross the Balkan peninsula. Serbia was recognized as kingdom in late 19th century, and was the driving force behind Turkish defeat during First Balkan War. Given these and numerous other supporting facts (no opinions and no bias), how could anyone argue that Tesla was a Croat?
- I don't think most of the people edit warring about Tesla's nationality are necessarily interested in presenting a balanced and historically-accurate account. Kaldari 18:35, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
- I'm unprotecting the article tentatively. Let's hope it can stay that way. Kaldari 16:48, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I'm semi-protecting the article again. Sigh. Kaldari 23:02, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
Why don't you call him an "Austrian Empire-American" : )
And why is there no notice about the protected status at the top of the article itself?
Request - Filled
Could someone change all occurences of Conductor (material) to Electrical Conductor? on this page? InvertRect 16:06, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
- Done. Why not just do it yourself though? In the time it took to type that message you could have done it. Sparkhead 22:32, 30 September 2006 (UTC)
Telsa and alternating current - Wiki dates are wrong
If you look up Alternating Current in Wikipedia, it states that it was "devised by many contributors including Nikola Tesla, George Westinghouse, Lucien Gaulard, John Gibbs, and Oliver Shallenger from 1881 to 1889."
But if you look up Nikola Tesla in Wikipedia, it states that he "studied electrical engineering at the Austrian Polytechnic in Graz, Austria (1875). While there, he studied the uses of alternating current."
How could he have studied the uses of alternating current in 1875, if he was one of the inventors of it years later???
- I think its bad wording rather than wrong dates. There is a big difference between alternating current as a theoretical possibility/lab curiosity/future idea and alternating current as a practical means of power transmission. Plugwash 19:35, 28 September 2006 (UTC)
Serbo-Croat vs. Serbian and Croation
Discuss. Kaldari 21:58, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
- "Serbo-Croat" or Central-South Slavic is a diasystem (or dialectal continuum). Croatian and Serbian are languages. Afrika Paprika 05:15, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Yeah Africa, like Illinois and Indiana are two languages. Pure bullshit.Edison 04:38, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- You're saying he spoke Serbian and Croatian, which implies he spoke two languages. But he spoke the same language with both Serbs and Croats, and it logically follows that Serbian and Croatian are the same language. And I think you'll find that they are considered one language by most non-Croat linguists. One example at random: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/slavonic/staff/ --estavisti 05:50, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- The statement that he spoke two of these languages is PC statement. He spoke Croatian actually as he was born in Croatia and educated in Croatia. The fact Croatian and Serbian are mutually inteligible doesn't mean they are the same language...f.e. Czech and Slovak; Danish, Swedish and Norwegian; Macedonian-Bulgarian, etc. Stating that he spoke some fantasy never existing "Serbo-Croat" language is just false and wrong. Afrika Paprika 21:17, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Pure bullshit. One language , two slightly different accents. maybe Kentucky and Illinois speak two different languages??Edison 04:42, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- He was actually born in Military Frontier part of Croatia, which was inhabited by a large Serb majority. Both of his parents were the Serbs. Thus, his native language must be Serbian. It is not logical that members of a Serb family could ever speak Croatian between themselves. ;) And he attended the primary school in Gospić, a town in the Frontier, and thus he spoke Serbian there, too. He could have heard Croatian for the first time only when he went to Karlovac to attend the gymnasium. But he also attended the University of Prague and yet I wouldn't say that he spoke Czech (as a native language). :) --Djordje D. Bozovic 21:29, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Per Tesla, he was born in the Military Frontier of Austria Hungary, not of Croatia. Croatia (the country) was created much later. Edison 04:42, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- All Serbs in Croatia are speaking and have spoke Croatian language and Tesla was no exception. Just like most if not all Croats in Serbian speak mainly Serbian language. He also did not attend only elementary school in Gospic but he also went to high school in Karlovac and later came to study in Zagreb from where he later went to Vienna, Budapest, Prague, New York (not nesscesarily in that order of course). Afrika Paprika 21:51, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
- Oh, please... I wonder, was the Gorski vijenac that both Tesla and his mother knew by heart in Croatian too? And all the other Serbian folk poems Tesla's mother Djuka knew. And the Serbian folk stories she told him before he went to sleep. Were they in Croatian? And perhaps Tesla's father, who was a Serb Orthodox priest, served in Croatian? No, I'm sure they all actually were pure Croats! Just they didn't know that; there was no you to tell them. :) You see, perhaps Croats in Serbia in deed speak Serbian, but they have to, because they live in a Serb environment. On the other hand, in Lika, during the Tesla's lifetime, Serbs were the majority, and they were speaking Serbian freely, with no Croatian influences, unlike Serb-influenced Croats in Serbia (I believe you know that Military Frontier was NOT part of Hungary like neighbouring Croatia and Dalmatia [which were inhabited by the Croats, and the Frontier was inhabited by the Serbs], but under the direct jurisdiction of Austria). --Djordje D. Bozovic 11:57, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- The statement that he spoke two of these languages is PC statement. He spoke Croatian actually as he was born in Croatia and educated in Croatia. The fact Croatian and Serbian are mutually inteligible doesn't mean they are the same language...f.e. Czech and Slovak; Danish, Swedish and Norwegian; Macedonian-Bulgarian, etc. Stating that he spoke some fantasy never existing "Serbo-Croat" language is just false and wrong. Afrika Paprika 21:17, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
Surely there must be a reference somewhere for what Tesla's primary language was. Don't any of his biographies mention it? Kaldari 18:53, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- So in order to tell someone Serbian folk stories you must tell them in Serbian? LOL. That is really ridiculous right there. And btw. 'Military Frontier' was still part of Hungary(and Croatia) althogh it was under direct command of the army and the court as a buffer zone. Serbs were a minority btw. in the Slavonian and Croatian Military Frontier...substantial minority but a minority nonetheless. Afrika Paprika 20:24, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- No, it was not part of Hungary. It was under the direct jurisdiction of Austrian court. In Lika Serbs were the majority. Can you provide some references for your claims? --Djordje D. Bozovic 20:30, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- No, it was part of Croatia. Banatian Frontier was part of Hungary. And exactly, it was under the direct jurisdiction of the Austrian court and the King/Emperor. Nominally it was still and it never ceased to be part of Croatian kingdom. In Lika Serbs were a relative majority. For example in 1910. there were 104 000 Serbs and 100 000 Croats....what "huge majority". If we look at data of the whole Croatian and Slavonian Frontier(the one which is today part of Croatia) Croats were majority. Afrika Paprika 15:06, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- Academic historian Sima Ćirković: "Teritorija Vojne granice bila je izuzeta ispod vlasti bana i Hrvatskog sabora. Teritorija Hrvatske, koju su suvremenici nazivali 'ostaci ostatka Hrvatskog kraljevstva' bila je na taj način još jednom okrnjena." (The territory of Military Frontier was not under the jurisdiction of the Ban and the Croatian Parliament. Thus, the territory of Croatia, which was called 'the remnant of the remnants of Croatian Kingdom' by the people of that time, was once again shortened.) So? :) --Djordje D. Bozovic 14:04, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
- No, it was not part of Hungary. It was under the direct jurisdiction of Austrian court. In Lika Serbs were the majority. Can you provide some references for your claims? --Djordje D. Bozovic 20:30, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- So in order to tell someone Serbian folk stories you must tell them in Serbian? LOL. That is really ridiculous right there. And btw. 'Military Frontier' was still part of Hungary(and Croatia) althogh it was under direct command of the army and the court as a buffer zone. Serbs were a minority btw. in the Slavonian and Croatian Military Frontier...substantial minority but a minority nonetheless. Afrika Paprika 20:24, 9 October 2006 (UTC)
- Here is Tesla's father biography, with a statement that Milutin Tesla wanted to open a Serbian-language high school in Gospic (I don't know why, perhaps because he was speaking Croatian, like all the other Serbs in Croatia? :)). Then you have ...Ivo Andrić, the famous Nobel laureate in literature who wrote in Serbian, or Nikola Tesla... at [28]. This site says: Other than in mother tongue Serbian, Tesla was fluent in six other languages. But I couldn't find anything other than this. :( It seems that Nikola Tesla had no mother tongue at all! And that ends our discussion - the problem is solved! ;) However, here you can find this: He spoke five languages fluently, but English was
his mother tongue. :D lol! Now what can one say? --Djordje D. Bozovic 23:31, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- Seriously, why should anyone point out that Serbian was Tesla's native language? It is quite enough just to say that he was a Serb, and it is logical that a Serb would speak Serbian, isn't it? His mother was singing Serbian epic poems (her family, as Tesla once stated himself, was one of the oldest Serbian families, having roots in the Middle Ages). His father was a Serb priest. There is no way that he could hear them two speaking Croatian, really. :) Don't be ridiculous! --Djordje D. Bozovic 23:31, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- But why don't we pick up a sentence written by Tesla himslef in his native language and analize it? Is there anything like that? --Djordje D. Bozovic 23:37, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
- It seems most of his published writing was in English. Kaldari 07:36, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
- But why don't we pick up a sentence written by Tesla himslef in his native language and analize it? Is there anything like that? --Djordje D. Bozovic 23:37, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
Serbo-Croat is one language otherwise i could say that i can speak english, american, australian .... tiny differnces dont make two completely different languages, although the croatians now are changing the words in their languages to make it different to seperate themselves from serbs. to argue which language (croatian or serb) he spoke is stupid. his native tongue is Serbo-Croatian Дaнко
- Actually, the speakers' preference is what makes the languages different. Have you ever heard of this saying: A language is a dialect with an army and navy. True, isn't it? --Djordje D. Bozovic 22:33, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
The two {{fact}}s
Both quotations can be found in Margaret Cheney's biography of Tesla. So it can be used as a source. Somebody please source it when this page becomes unlocked. Horvat Den 22:55, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
- The Cheney book is a reliable source, even if there are mistakes in it, so if something has it as a a source, it is fine to cite it in the article and remove the 'fact' tag. If a different book says otherwise, then the article can be kept neutral by citing that as well. Eddy Kurentz 17:13, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Brother's Story
It's been a while since I've read Tesla's Bio, but I believe I read his younger brother fell down the cellar stairs horsing around or some cellar stairs involved accident- age five seems young to have had a horse riding accident, usually children this young would be supervised by adults. I'll try to find where I read this and get back.
- Tesla had an older brother Dane, who died in a horse riding accident at the age of 22, in the time when Tesla was five. --Djordje D. Bozovic 16:24, 8 October 2006 (UTC)
Birthplace
Why does it link to Croatian Krajina, a very poor stub, instead to the rich Military Frontier article? Also, the seperation on "Croatian" and "Slavonian" was by-gone abandoned (simply on districts) by the time Tesla was born... I have no idea who changed the link to "Croatian Krajina", as it seems like trying to present a POV, at the cost of a very good article. --PaxEquilibrium 16:17, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
Tesla Invented the Radio, not Marconi
I have read that Nikola Tesla was given the credit for inventing the Radio. The invention was credited to Tesla in 1942. Why do people still say Marconi invented the Radio today?
Was the credit of 1942 taken back and given back to Marconi?
Jagoda 1 03:38, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
- "Inventing radio" is a pretty meaningless phrase. See Nathan Stubblefield, who transmitted voice messages in 1892. Marconi used electromagnetic waves to send telegraph signals to great distances, like across the Atlantic Ocean, and his company put wireless units on many ships. Tesla did not. Such is fame. Edison 04:33, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
`````````````
As far as i know Tesla invented a fair few things he never got credit for. Mr Edison and Mr Marconi got that credit and not Tesla. However that changed in 1942 when a court ruled that Tesla invented the radio and not Marconi. Today it has also come to light that Edison also ripped off many ideas and some were from Tesla.
Truth comes out.
As for Nathan Subblefield, never heard of him but looks like he fell by the way side just like Tesla did.
We need to write the wrong...Jagoda 1 05:00, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Marconi stations were the first to be set up to allow communication between navy ships, merchant vessels, and shore stations, as well as allowing ship to ship communication. Tesla did very early experiments in the technology, as did his predecessor Hertz and others, such as Lodge, but he did not put a system into practice which had any practical use. He took out a very general patent which did not give details for a practical radio system. By 1942 it had long since expired. Eddy Kurentz 17:49, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Why?
Is the note of him being proud of his Serbian ethnicity and Croatian homeland in the intro? It isn't that relevant at all... --PaxEquilibrium 18:31, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
If he said those words it should be left in the article, end of story. Why no mention of his possible Vlah origin? In Yugoslav folklore he was also called a Gypsy...how quickly people forget today. Article is fair as it stands only change you can make is adding Vlah which most historians accept as his true origin.
However - Serbian - American born in Austria-Hungary (Croatia today) How is this wrong? This sounds ok to me. Jagoda 1 23:24, 11 October 2006 (UTC)
Birthdate
I think July 9/10 should be restored, as many sources give that – [29] . Biruitorul 06:39, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
I've started an approach that may apply to Wikipedia's Core Biography articles: creating a branching list page based on in popular culture information. I started that last year while I raised Joan of Arc to featured article when I created Cultural depictions of Joan of Arc, which has become a featured list. Recently I also created Cultural depictions of Alexander the Great out of material that had been deleted from the biography article. Since cultural references sometimes get deleted without discussion, I'd like to suggest this approach as a model for the editors here. Regards, Durova 15:54, 18 October 2006 (UTC)
Seeing as how Tesla (played by David Bowie, of all people) is a major character in the new film The Prestige (film), I highly agree with adding a section or separate page about Tesla in media, as is mentioned above. Maria 16:24, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Quote from My Inventions
After Estavisti flagged the quote from Tesla's book My Inventions as needing a more authoritative citation [30], I went to Amazon.com and used the "search inside this book" feature to locate the quote. I searched for both "I am proud" and "Croatian homeland" within the book and came up with nothing. However, the Croatian National Tourist Board's website claims that Tesla used that quote in at least one telegram. [31] With that in mind, are there any objections to me putting the quote back into the article, and citing it with the CNTB's website? (Thanks Estavisti for flagging this issue.) - Walkiped 19:47, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
Hmm, the reason I flagged it is because I'd always heard it was mentioned in correspodence with some notable Croat (exactly who it was escapes me), not in My Inventions. I've read My Inventions, and I don't think it's in there. Anyway, it can be put back in for now, but we still need a source that's more authoritative than the Tourist Board of Croatia. --estavisti 20:08, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
AC/DC Efficiency Question
What is meant by the line in the "Middle Years" section: "Also in the late 1880s, Tesla and Edison became adversaries in part due to Edison's promotion of direct current (DC) for electric power distribution over the more efficient alternating current advocated by Tesla and Westinghouse." How is AC more efficient than DC? Does it have some sort of technical meaning or is it a bit of NPOV? I honestly don't know and wonder if this needs som emore clarity. --Gangster Octopus 21:18, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
- See War of the currents. AC can be easily stepped up to thousands of volts and sent for great distances over relatively small wires, then be stepped back down the the voltage used in homes and businesses. DC required a generating station every 2 or 3 miles and big conductors. The efficience probably refers to less power lost on the conductors because the current is reduced when the voltage is stepped up. AC won the battle by the 1890's, although big city utilities kept supplying DC to some customers for many decades, since the customers had elevators, pumps etc that continued to work fine on DC.Edison 05:03, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
- On the other hand, AC loses some energy via radiation. It is the convenience overall of properties of AC, especially its flexibility using transformers and efficiency of AC motors (particularly 3-phase ones), that seem to have prevailed in practice. — DAGwyn 22:48, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- WRONG FACT ABOUT NIKOLA TESLA ****
English Wikipedia claims that Tesla was Serbian-American which is wrong. He was actually Croatian who moved to Austria first, to finish the studies. Then he went to New York where he made most of his inventions and where he also died. He was born in the small village called Smiljan, Croatia (Lika County). His famous sentence was: "I am the Croatian with Serbian roots!" So, he cannot be Serbian cause he never actually was in or lived in Serbia. PLEASE CORRECT THAT!!!
- True, Tesla was not a Serbian, since he never lived in Serbia. But he was a Serb by ethnicity, despite that he was born in what is today Croatia. And the adjective meaning of Serbs is Serbian. Read the sentence once again - it does not say that Tesla was Serbian-American, it says that he was Serbian-American scientist, which is not the same. --Djordje D. Bozovic 16:46, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
It's not the most important thing to say about a truly great scientist like Nikola Tesla, however it has to be noted that Tesla was an ethnic Serb and a self declared Serb, a claim which no Serb citizen would question at that time or in the actuality. Legally, he held Austria-Hungary Empire and later USA citizeship. He was never a Croat by any means; that country didn't even existed during his lifetime, with exception of the infamous "Independent State of Croatia", installed in 1941 by the German Third Reich and the Fascist Italy after their invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
- Why then Tesla says that Croatia is his homeland???? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 89.164.141.73 (talk) 00:00, 17 April 2007 (UTC).
I want to know why the greatest of Tesla's project are not here...
Thomas Edison (And I really don't care if I mispelled his name.) is dumb. I don't know why we are saying that he did a lot for the science...
Tesla created many thing that we are still using in our days. But most of all, he created 2 thing that are not in the article and IT SHOULD BE!
First of all, he created a Free energy and secondly he created a tower wich was able to conduct the electricity in the Atmosphere to an another tower. Those 2 great invention were removed from him by the gouvernement. So why his best project are not in those page! And by the way. Don't support G.W.Bush in any possible way. Well, if you care of your own world. And by the way, I suggest you to do some ressearch about free energy, 911, Terrorstorm, IgnoranceIsntBliss, They Want Your Soul, Electric Car, An Inconvenient Truth, New World Order and after that, give the information to anyone. But if you are too sacred and don't want to believe it cause it don't suit your perception of the world, then I hope you will survive the next decade... Without becomming slave or dead as well. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by INeedMoreInfo (talk • contribs).
You missed out the bit about the black helicopters, the Rosicrucians and the lizard people. Great spelling, though. Notreallydavid 14:22, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
Oh, and the Protocols Notreallydavid 14:59, 3 December 2006 (UTC)
I always heard that Thomas Edison was deaf, but that he could speak ok. Didn't he record his voice reciting "Mary had a little Lamb" on the first record made? Maybe that could be added to the Thomas Edison article if you can find a book or something saying he was dumb. I would love to have some free energy, since the electric costs about 10 cents per kilowatt hour. Tesla sent a lot of electricity into the air, but I've never heard he was able to get any out at a different location like he claimed he could. In his old age he would have a birthday party every year and invite reporters and make a lot of wild claims that he never put into practice. Eddy Kurentz 17:06, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Redirect
Since this page is protected, please add this:
Once that's done, Tesla should probably redirect here.
- {{otherusesof|Tesla}} added. timrem 04:41, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
Unencyclopedic boasting
Added "fact" tag to the boasts in the intro. It is unencyclopedic to repeatedly say things like "Tesla is regarded as one of the most important inventors in history." Find a book where the author said it and is a reliable source. "In the United States, Tesla's fame rivaled that of any other inventor or scientist in history or popular culture." Ditto. Find a source. "he was widely respected as America's greatest electrical engineer. " Find a source where some scientific or engineering organization said it. He certainly made major contributions to electrical engineering, but surely when he won awards they said similar things about him. That would count for something. This sounds like boasts by his descendants or countrymen, and is like someone saying "X is the greatest musician in the world" or "Y is the best football player in the world" which would both get promptly edited out if they don;t have a source saying it. If it is the opinion of an editor, then it is original research and must be removed. Let's put in similar claims, properly sourced, so they do not violate WP:NOR. Thanks Eddy Kurentz 15:14, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
- The boasts at the beginning will surely keep this article from getting featured status. They still are POV and lack reliable sources. Someone added footnotes 3,4, and 5 and removed the "Fact" tags. But surely there are better references than websites of fan clubs to support the boasts. Sources should be reliable, like WP:RS describes, and these are not, since one is a photo site where anyone can write anything, the second is a fan club or organization devoted to promoting the inventor, and the third is a site devoted to promoting Serbian national pride. Where are quotes from independent organizations, scholarly journals, or organizations presenting him with prizes? Isn't there anything quoted in the books by Cheney, O'Neill or Seifer? The present sources behind these boasts are nothing more than window dressing, non-reliable sources:
- http://www.flickr.com/photos/jdredding/279133663/ A site where anyone can apparently say anything
- http://www.teslasociety.com/ a fan club
- http://news.suc.org/people/tesla/index.html a national pride organization
Thanks Eddy Kurentz 19:10, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Tesla in C&C
The Command and Conquer: Red Alert game uses several "Tesla" structures, most prominently the Tesla Coil, should this be added into the "Fictional Portrayal" bit?
Nikola Tesla Elementary School in Novi Sad
It might be worth mentioning in the article that he also has an elementary school named after him in Novi Sad. Stop The Lies 11:25, 20 December 2006 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
- There are many primary and secondary schools all over Serbia named after Nikola Tesla, not only in Novi Sad. --Djordje D. Bozovic 11:41, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- True, but that's the most special one :P (I went there hehe) Stop The Lies 12:43, 20 December 2006 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
Tesla is croatian scientist
Tesla was born in Croatia so he is a Croatian inventor.
- As far as I know, Tesla was born in Austria-Hungary, not Croatia. He was born in the province named the Military Frontier, whose population was mostly Serbian, and Tesla was a Serb himself, being son of a Serbian Orthodox priest. His mother was also a daughter of a Serbian Orthodox priest. Both his parents and all his ancestors were Serbs (in one letter Tesla said that his mother's family is an old Serbian family whose roots reach as far as the Middle Ages). Tesla was only born in what many years later became the Republic of Croatia. Now, do you claim everyone who was born in what is now Croatia a Croatian? Even if they were born in, let's say, the prehistory? --Djordje D. Bozovic 11:51, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
Yes!
Tesla is Croatian-Serb , he was born in Croatia and his parents were Serbs. That's a fact. MetalCro 22:51, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
Tesla is Croatian.
- Once again, Tesla was not born in Croatia. He was only born in what many years later became the Republic of Croatia. --Djordje D. Božović 15:59, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
actually the province was officially named "Croatian Military Frontier"
List of Tesla patents
put in List of Tesla patents? 69.76.192.205 20:56, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- It is unless I've missed the point of your question. (Emperor 22:13, 24 December 2006 (UTC))
Prose Request -- "Said to Have"
Intro Section.
This sounds like hearsay:
"Tesla is said to have contributed in varying degrees..."
Make it:
"Tesla is is credited with contributing in varying degrees..."
- Please cite the reliable source in each case which credited him. Edison 05:41, 3 January 2007 (UTC)
who is responding to FAC?
Are any editors here involved in, and responding to, the current FAC nomination? This article is so close to FA status, yet the FAC is currently nothing but "objects" on a number of points that aren't too hard to fix. I'm writing here only because it would be so nice to see a successful featured article candidate on an important and interesting encyclopedia article like this. Thanks. –Outriggr § 00:49, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
- One sticking point seems to be "Recognition and honors". A fix might be moving Nikola Tesla in popular culture to "Cultural depictions of Nikola Tesla" (see suggestion above) and add the bulk of that material in there and polish it all up. Most other things are easy fixes. (Emperor 00:59, 4 January 2007 (UTC))
Nit on "Prestige" reference in Tesla article
The following quote appears near the bottom of the article, "Tesla has also made a recent appearance in the movie The Prestige portrayed by David Bowie. In the film he is called upon to build an electrical illusion [emphasis added] machine."
In the movie, Tesla was commissioned to develop an electrical teleportation machine, not an electrical illusion machine. Unfortunately for all involved, the fictional Tesla actually creates an electrical cloning machine.
--Rhurwitz 21:05, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
There is no proof that Tesla's machine ever worked, it is rumored that the machine never actually worked and that it was all part of the Prestige of the film itself, the part where it is seen that Angiers kills the clone might not be true. The dead body of Angier might be the double he used 2 years before with his act "The New Transported Man".
Zae 10:21, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
REQUESTED REVISIONS
"node" vs. "terminal"
The word "node" in the following phrases, "single node vacuum tubes," "single node X-ray producing devices," and "single node bulbs" should be changed to "terminal" as this is the preferred term used by Tesla himself. The word "electrode" is also used for this element. (See Tesla's lecture, "Experiments with Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency," IEE Address, London, February 1892, http://www.tfcbooks.com/tesla/1892-02-03.htm ).GPeterson 01:51, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
Inaccurate wording
The description "Aims to reuse the Wardenclyffe Tower" associated with the external link "The Tesla Wardenclyffe Project" is inaccurate and should be changed. The correct wording is "Mission: the preservation and adaptive reuse of Wardenclyffe. GPeterson 14:33, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
Edison's last words
Shortly before Edison died, he said that his biggest mistake he had made was never respecting Tesla or his work. [citation needed]
If there is no source for this, it should go. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 58.105.179.56 (talk) 13:44, 8 March 2007 (UTC).
- There is. Both in Margaret Cheney's and Marc Seifer's books. Horvat Den 09:07, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
teLSa
Why does telsa direct here but not Tesla?
- Because there is a disambiguation page for the many uses of the word Tesla there. A Ramachandran 23:15, 15 January 2007 (UTC)
- Telsa should redirect to the Tesla disambiguation page as well - this has been changed. ~Kruck 00:24, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
Nikola Tesla was a Serb-American inventor
Re. very critical misuse of facts stating that Nikola Tesla was a Serb-American inventor: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola_Tesla
Nikola Tesla was born in the village of Smiljani near the city of Gospic both geograficaly placed in CROATIA and not Serbia. Nikola Tesla was Croatian born and this page was clearly edited by pro serbian.
I am Danish and I don't belong to either sides but the fact is the fact and the fact of the matter is that Nikola Tesla was Croatian born.
Thank you
Søren K
- Please see and participate in other discussions on this talk page about this topic, as there are many. Ex: Talk:Nikola_Tesla#Nationality. ~Kruck 13:37, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
Antisemitism
This is sourced to a footnote in a book by a fairly non-notable author. I have not been able to ascertain where the author got it from. We should be careful about these things, and until we can corroborate this with another source or two, I have blanked the sentence (but left it in the article, it just can't be seen).--Hadžija 21:26, 20 January 2007 (UTC)
Settling the nationality dispute
As far as I can tell, Tesla's mother country was internationally recognized as the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by the end of Tesla's life. Per precedent set on almost every other biographical article, the opening should state, the person's nationality, not ethnicity. People have repeatedly pointed out the absurdity of calling him "Croatian-American" due to the nation not existing in his lifetime. It only makes a little more sense to call him "Austro-Hungarian-American," since the state no longer existed after WW1 and Tesla was still alive for decades thereafter. Therefore, it seems to make most sense to call him "Yugoslavian-American," with "Yugoslavian" wikilinked to the Kingdom. Thoughts? Simões (talk/contribs) 19:22, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- By your logic, most Irish-Americans were "British-American", most Polish-Americans and Jewish-Americans were "Austro-Hungarian-Americans" and "Imperial Russian-Americans". The forumla is [ethnicity]-American, though it's debateable whether to include him as an American at all unless we have source to show that he considered himelf one. Your suggestion regarding the Kingdom is quite funny, given that he was 62 when it was formed. I don't see what's unacceptable about the current phrasing to be honest.--Hadžija 21:42, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Britain has never included Ireland. It's England, Scotland, and Wales. So, no, most Irish-Americans were not British-Americans. "Austro-Hungarian-American" and "Russian-American" are fine. Often, an article will say "[Name] is a [nationality] [professional title] of [ethnicity] descent." Finally, Tesla was an American citizen. Does anyone else have any thoughts on this? Simões (talk/contribs) 22:13, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Yeah, that was sloppy of me. "UK-Americans" is what I meant :) As for "Austro-Hungarian-American" being OK, it gets a massive 39 non-WP hits in Google, none of which are even in the context you suggest. And please, just try to call a Polish-American or a Ukrainian-American whose folks came from the Russian Empire that he's a Russian-American. See what happens :) I'll buy you a beer if you survive to get back to us :D --Hadžija 22:54, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Britain has never included Ireland. It's England, Scotland, and Wales. So, no, most Irish-Americans were not British-Americans. "Austro-Hungarian-American" and "Russian-American" are fine. Often, an article will say "[Name] is a [nationality] [professional title] of [ethnicity] descent." Finally, Tesla was an American citizen. Does anyone else have any thoughts on this? Simões (talk/contribs) 22:13, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Looking a few topics above, I see this debate just seems to go around and around. Here's my 2 cents worth. I'm very disinclined to refer to Tesla as "Yugoslav"-anything. This is an anachronistic rewriting of history. His nationality or citizenship was never "Yugoslav". He was born an ethnic Serbian citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. When he was 28 he moved to the USA. When he was 35 he became an American citizen. When he was 73 (!!), his old country reorganized itself into the "Kingdom of Yugoslavia". Of what relevance is that last event to Tesla? None, imo. I’m also disinclined to leave him as “Serbian American”. That means "an American of Serbian descent", which suggests someone who was always American but has Serbian blood. That is not the case for Tesla and people of similar circumstances. Tesla’s children (had he had any) could properly be described as Serbian Americans - but Tesla himself, no. Trying to have a short-form nationality descriptor that fits all possible circumstances is doomed to failure because it allows too many ambiguities. Why not say the unambiguous (if slightly long-winded) truth: He was born an ethnic Serbian citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and later became an American citizen. JackofOz 23:51, 21 January 2007 (UTC)
- Why, that's not bad at all! "Why not say the unambiguous (if slightly long-winded) truth: He was born an ethnic Serbian citizen of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and later became an American citizen." Why does everyone have to be categorized into a one-word or hyphenated two-word nationality when most of us are much more complicated than that! Stop The Lies 00:11, 22 January 2007 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
- I also support JackofOz's proposed wording. A minor case of long-windedness is of no consequence when accuracy is not achieved with shorter phrases. Simões (talk/contribs) 00:40, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
- And let's not forget, it's less controversial that way. Wouldn't want a wheel war or edit war over that, now would we? So that I think is a great compromise :) Rfwoolf 15:43, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
Okay, there have been no objections in the five days since this has been up. I'm going to go ahead and insert it. What we'll probably see now are objectors coming out of the woodwork who never participate in talk page discussions until after something is added that displeases them. ;) Simões (talk/contribs) 15:00, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- I made one small change: "Serbian" became "Serb," since the former refers to occupants of a region (regardless of ethnicity), and the latter is, in fact, an ethnic group. If anyone objects to this modification, feel free to revert it to the pure consensus (i.e, JackofOz's sentences) version, and we'll hash out the issue here. Simões (talk/contribs) 15:07, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
- I don't necessarily have an objection if those are the accepted definitions of the ethnic group versus the occupants of a region, but it reads funny. "Serbian" flows better, and since the sentence already says "ethnic" why not use the one that flows. I almost made that edit right off but figured there was a reason it was "Serb" and not "Serbian" so I checked the talk page here.--Littleman_TAMU (talk) 19:04, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
Lomas Book
I recently picked up a copy of this book by Lomas (from a Vinnies Shop!) Is this considered to be a reliable book? I ask this because there are a few things in it which are not in the article. For example, Tesla's phone call to Colonel Erskine in the US War Department offering his 'teleforce' weapon to the US government. The call was made in the hours before Tesla's death so it would seem to be significant in the light of the FBI's moves. Is this book regarded as a reputable source, from information may be drawn to add to the article? John Dalton 00:37, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
I have not seen this book, so I can't give a personal opinion on it. I couldn't find published reviews, but a couple of readers who gave reader submitted reviews on Amazon.com said it was readable, but lacked references and would not satisfy scientific readers. Lomas has written a number of books which say that Freemasons are behind lots of things in the the world. Did that theme show up in the book? There are two books which are probably better sources: "Tesla: Man out of Time" by Margaret Cheney and "Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla: Biography of a Genius" by Marc J. Seifer. If Lomas makes amazing claims, he needs to provide good sources, or the fact he said something might not prove that it happened. The phone call from Tesla to Erskine: How does Lomas say he knows it happened? Eddy Kurentz 22:55, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Lomas' biography of Tesla is a fairly reliable source, although it is very biased in favor of Tesla. It is true that he is also a Masonic author and that his books about Masonry contain some perposterous theories but his book on Tesla has nothing to do with Masonry. He has written on many non-Masonic subjects and is a historian of science. NikolaiLobachevsky 16:08, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
Intro
...is wrong. Tesla couldn't've been born in a state created a decade after the occasion. --PaxEquilibrium 22:22, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
- Fixed. Simões (talk/contribs) 22:31, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Personality
Regarding: "Nevertheless, Tesla displayed the occasional cruel streak; overweight people disgusted him and he made little effort to conceal it, once firing a secretary because of her weight.... Tesla was also recorded to display sporadic anti-Semitism, once calling a secretary to him and hissing "Miss! Never trust a Jew!".[70]" from the Personality section.
- Is there a quote/written doc. of Tesla himself saying/writing "overweight people disgust me" (or even "displease me")? If not, "overweight people disgusted him and he made little effort to conceal it" must be removed.
- Need actual proof that the secretary was fired due to her weight and not incompetence.
- The word 'hissing' is enough to discredit the source, but giving them the benefit of the doubt, say he did say "Miss! Never trust a Jew", how do we know this wasn't a joke? Jokes poking fun at Jews are very common, even among people who are not anti-Semites, and even Jews themselves.
- Assuming Tesla did say "Miss! Never trust a Jew" and did mean it as an insult towards Jews, this does not prove that Tesla displayed anti-Semitism on more than one occasion.
Section needs to either be checked, or removed. Stop The Lies 02:46, 11 February 2007 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
- I like your username. It makes me feel like you're on my side. As for your bulleted concerns:
- It's interesting that you say that. My user name was seen as almost aggressive by a user when they referred to it as "propaganda" hehe. But they didn't agree with what I was saying, so I guess they misplaced their anger. Stop The Lies 03:13, 11 February 2007 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
- I'm not sure if the citation at the end of the paragraph was meant to cover the entire paragraph or just the quip about Jews. So maybe.
- Same
- You'll have to get a consensus to change WP:CITE/WP:RS before we can consider the word "hissing" enough to discredit a source. I'm guessing the author of this book inferred anti-Semitism from the comment. Your interpretation is plausible but unpublished.
- By the way the passage is worded, it looks like a representative example is given. But if the source says he displayed sporadic anti-Semitism, then that's what we have with which to work.
- So does anyone have a copy of this book so that we may check? Simões (talk/contribs) 03:05, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
- Perhaps the person who originally posted the info? I'm not sure how to find out exactly what user that is... Stop The Lies 03:13, 11 February 2007 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
- Yes, everything is directly from Cheney's book. If you feel any of the remarks on anti-semitism and cruelty towards the obese are unreliable, you're gonna have to take it up with her. Let's not try to glorify Tesla as a Saint. He was, after all, human. Humans have prejudices and ticks. Horvat Den 09:05, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
- Oh hey, it's searchable at Amazon.com[32]. There are actually two examples of anti-Semitism given: he also referred to Jews as "social trilobytes." The book also says his anti-Semitism is sporadic (and not a couple isolate events). There is also reference to his disdain for overweight people and the secretary firing. This is on a different page, though (110), so the reference needs to be updated. I'll go ahead and do that. Simões (talk/contribs) 03:19, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
- Perhaps the person who originally posted the info? I'm not sure how to find out exactly what user that is... Stop The Lies 03:13, 11 February 2007 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
Approximate Bonus Offer Date
Paragraph 2 under United States says that in 1919 Tesla wrote that Edison offered him a bonus to complete the redesigning of the generators. Paragraph 8 of Middle Years states that in the last 1880's that Tesla and Edison became rivals. In 1886 Tesla started his own companies and worked in other research labs than Edison's, and they were Nobel nominees in 1915.
Did Edison offer him a bonus in 1919? How was it possible for Tesla to still work for Edison at that time, being rivals and involved in totally different locations with different companies? Or does this mean that Tesla wrote in 1919 that Edison had offered a bonus? If so, when did that original bonus interchange take place? --WPaulB 07:16, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Tesla first wrote in 1919 that Edison had offered him a big bonus of $50,000 in the 1880s when he was making 17 dollars a week, to do some redesign work on electrical equipment, and then wouldn't pay him. I know of no other documentation that he did major redesigns on Edison equipment or what they were. Other sources say he was refused a raise to $25 a week and left because of that. The info about them being 1915 Nobel Nominees appears to be false. Eddy Kurentz 23:36, 10 April 2007 (UTC)
Nikola Tesla was a Croat
Nikola Tesla was born in Croatia (at that time within Austria-Hungary). He completed his elementary and secondary school education in Croatia (in Gospic and Karlovac). When his mother died, he paid a visit to Croatian capital Zagreb in 1892, where he gave a lecture about alternating current. On that occasion he said:
"As a son of my homeland I feel it is my duty to help the city of Zagreb in every respect with my advice and work."
There is no doubt that by saying "homeland" he meant Croatia. His monument carved by Ivan Mestrovic, who knew him personally, can be seen in Zagreb (Croatia). After the end of World War II, the famous sculptor was asked by Belgrade (Serbia) officials to prepare Tesla's monument for the capital of Yugoslavia, but he refused, explaining that Tesla did not like the city. By the way, the family name Tesla does not exist in Serbia.
So now all that beeing said. How can this article state that he was a "Serb-American inventor" ? And to the people saying he cant be Croatian because Croatia didnt exist then; he cant be Serbian then either since Serbia didnt exist either.
- I don't know when this question was posted, but the article hasn't said that for some considerable time. It says: "He was born an ethnic Serb citizen of the Austrian Empire and later became an American citizen." and later: "... Tesla was born ... to a Serbian family in the village of Smiljan near Gospić, in the Lika region of the Austrian Empire, located in present-day Croatia.". These are the facts.
- An ethnic Serb means a person whose family was of Serb genetic stock and spoke the Serbian language, regardless of which country they were citizens of. It doesn't mean Serbian as in a citizen of the country Serbia
(which, as has been correctly pointed out, didn't exist then). He and his parents were ethnic Serbs; that is indisputable. He and his family were Serb (not Serbian) subjects of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and he later became an American citizen. He was born in what is now Croatia, but that doesn't make him a "Croat". (He might be considered "Croatian" by association, but only in the same sense that Bruce Willis is "German" by association, because he was born there.) JackofOz 02:07, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
- Serbia did exist at the time of Tesla's birth as a principality independent from the Ottoman Empire, although it gained international recognition in 1878, about twenty years after Tesla was born. --Djordje D. Bozovic 13:48, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
Photos
Here is a website with 16 public domain photos of Tesla and his equipment. The website clearly states that the pictures are public domain and may be freely used. Perhaps someone should upload as many of these photos as possible to the commons? I'm afraid I don't have the time to do it now (deadline looming) but someone else might. Some of the pictures would add value to this article. For example, a picture of Tesla's boat, the display at the 1893 Chicago Exposition, Colorado Springs Lab and Wardenclyffe Tower. The site has quite a few public domain photos of other pioneers which should be grabbed for the commons as well. John Dalton 08:10, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
About Nikola Tesla nationality
...Nikola Tesla was Serbian, born to Serb Orthodox Priest and Serbian mother.
As a matter of fact. Croats blow up his native house few years ago. But nowdays they want to make him "Croat".
Regards —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 90.157.166.87 (talk) 16:08, 9 March 2007 (UTC).
Yugoslav!
It is best to call him Yugoslav because he supported the Yugoslav idea (that serbs croats and bosniaks are one)... In addition, calling him this would be good because he was from Croatia and was Orthodox. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Reisender (talk • contribs) 06:16, 18 March 2007 (UTC).
- He was not born in Yugoslavia, nor he was a citizen of Yugoslavia. Even if he did support the Yugoslav idea, he never declared himself as a Yugoslav, but simply as a Serb. There is nothing so strange and bad if one declares as Serb, you know. Why does everybody keep trying not to admit that Tesla was a Serb. Croatian is fine (even though Croatia didn't even exist back then), American is fine, Yugoslav is fine, there were some who even tried to make him a Vlach (!), but only Serb cannot possibly be good enough... --Djordje D. Bozovic 11:34, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
- There are some other voices (like Henri Coandă) that sais Tesla (originally Teslea) was an istro-romanian, and so was his father. Coandă have met Tesla many times, so he should know what was Tesla saying about his ancestors.--Alex:Dan 10:54, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
- It is well known what was Tesla saying about his ancestry, as he was mentioning his Serbian roots so many times. His surname Tesla (not Teslea) is actually a regular Serbian (not Istro-Romanian) word, a noun connected to the carpentry (Serb. tesati, tesanje, teslar, tesla). --Djordje D. Bozovic 15:49, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
- There is a tesla(tool) and teslar(carpenter, man working with a tesla) in Romanian too, meaning the same.--Alex:Dan 22:43, 29 March 2007 (UTC)
- There is a number of Slavonic words in Romanian. --Djordje D. Bozovic 18:34, 1 April 2007 (UTC)
- There is a tesla(tool) and teslar(carpenter, man working with a tesla) in Romanian too, meaning the same.--Alex:Dan 22:43, 29 March 2007 (UTC)
- It is well known what was Tesla saying about his ancestry, as he was mentioning his Serbian roots so many times. His surname Tesla (not Teslea) is actually a regular Serbian (not Istro-Romanian) word, a noun connected to the carpentry (Serb. tesati, tesanje, teslar, tesla). --Djordje D. Bozovic 15:49, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
- There are some other voices (like Henri Coandă) that sais Tesla (originally Teslea) was an istro-romanian, and so was his father. Coandă have met Tesla many times, so he should know what was Tesla saying about his ancestors.--Alex:Dan 10:54, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
e đorđe sereš li ga sereš —Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.172.143.16 (talk • contribs)
- Watch your vocabulary. --Djordje D. Bozovic 17:46, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
- People with Tesla surnames on arrival to America Not exclusively Serbian surname as meny say different ethnicity on arrival.
Expansion Problems: Lets get to Featured Status
We should focus less on expansion on Popular Culture and more on the Early and Middle Years sections. Best resource for this is "Marc Seifer's Wizard" Tesla Biography. Horvat Den 09:10, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
Mythbusters, Earthquake Machines, and mechanical resonance
From the article: Middle years-- There, at one point while experimenting with mechanical oscillators he generated a resonance of several surrounding buildings, but ironically due to the frequencies involved, not his own building, causing complaints to the police. As the speed grew he hit the resonant frequency of his own building and belatedly realizing the danger he was forced to apply a sledge hammer to terminate the experiment, just as the astonished police arrived.
Nikola Tesla in popular culture- The Discovery Channel's popular Mythbusters show successfully debunked Tesla's claim that he had created an "Earthquake Machine" in their 60th episode.
Maybe a note or reference to the incident should added to mythbusters' attempt to recreate what Tesla did. --136.159.209.27 18:00, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
The Discovery Channel's Mythbusters show, in their 60th episode, "debunked" Tesla's claim by going to a structure that is resistant to the effects of resonance. Today, we build to account for the physical phenomenon known as mechanical resonance. Traffic bridges, where the "test" took place, are built today to withstand such forces, especially after the Tacoma Narrows Bridge event. The show did state that they felt the shaking many yards away, but there were no "earth shattering" effects. In the time of the event undertaken by Tesla, buildings were not built to withstand such resonance.
Many brick building from that period suffer heavy damage if they are not retrofitted when subjected to such forces. He may have created an "Earthquake Machine", but today's science accounts for such occurances. J. D. Redding 18:23, 6 April 2007 (UTC)
Resonance from a small source of vibration such as in the Tesla claims should not reach a large amplitude if the vibrations are damped but structural material. A wire will resonate if clamped at both ends and stretched tight, but if it lies against something the magnitude of the vibration will be small. It takes work to move something back and forth if it has stiffness and friction or is in something viscous, and it takes work to establish vibrations of any magnitude if it has significant mass per unit length. The stories of a small device causing huge vibrations in a stiff massive structure smack of getting something for nothing or perpetual motion machines. Eddy Kurentz 23:41, 10 April 2007 (UTC)
REDIRECTION OF Tesla
Tesla should come here (as it has in the past). All meanings derive from Nikola Tesla, so the lemma should redirect there and not go to a disambiguation page.
Why is it so crucial to have the reader goto a intermediate page, when the majority of references of Tesla are to Nikola Tesla? The unit is found on the disambigous page, which would be @ the top of this page with "disambig|tesla" template. Tesla, as a name, is really not ambiguous at all.
As stated in Talk:Tesla (disambiguation), by another user, it's perferable to have the query directed to Nikola Tesla as all of the other links in this disambiguation about the Nikola Telsa. The terms are somehow derivitive of Nikola Tesla.
J. D. Redding 16:49, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
Please post comments and opinion below ... especially if there are objection to such a move, otherwise the redirection should go to this article, and any ambigous concepts on a "(disambiguation)". J. D. Redding
- In order for Tesla to redirect here, the disambiguation page that is there now would need to be moved (such as to Tesla (disambiguation)). Feel free to propose such a move at WP:RM. --Minderbinder 17:03, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
Below is original, copyright free material (much like the phone book data is not copyrighted, just the presentation is) to put into the disambig page. Hate dealing with the freaking bureaucracy .... but eventually WP:RM may be the only solution due to certain actions. J. D. Redding 17:20, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
Tesla (disambiguation)
Original content to be put in Tesla (disambiguation).
__NOTOC__ '''Tesla''' in most circumstances denotes [[Nikola Tesla]], the following articles can be used to diambiguate the references. == Main == *[[List of Tesla patents]] *[[Nikola Tesla in popular culture]] *[[Tesla (unit)]] *[[Tesla coil]] ====Entertainment==== * [[Tesla (band)]] ====Business==== * [[Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport]] * [[Ericsson Nikola Tesla]] * [[Tesla (company)]] * [[Tesla Pančevo]] * [[Tesla Studios]] * [[Tesla Motors]] [[* [[TPP Nikola Tesla]] ====Miscellaneous [[International Linear Collider]] * [[Tesla Fault]] * [[Tesla Advanced Communications]] * [[Time Efficient Streaming Loss-tolerant Authentication]] {{disambig}}
A disambig already exists for the topic at Tesla. If there's consensus to change the redirect, it would just need to be moved. --Minderbinder 17:27, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
Swami Vivekananda's Influence on Tesla
Again, so conveniently, Wikipedia "forgets" to mention the profound influence that Vivekananda had on Tesla. They both met in 1893 @ the Parliament of Religions and consequently in the years to follow. Tesla was deeply intrigued by Vedanta philosophy and even went far enough to use Sanskrit terms for his description of some of his theories that involved space (akasha) etc. This should at least be mentioned in the main article.
Broken Link
citation 105: should be http://www.tfcbooks.com/tesla/1926-01-30.htm I couldn't figure out how to edit the reflist —Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.148.163.112 (talk) 20:58, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
Suggested Link
- No. It just republishes free content from Project Gutenberg with Google Adsense. Bad link. Also, please stop spamming across article talk pages. See WP:EL and WP:SPAM. Nposs 02:25, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
Monuments
Please note - there is a statue (identical to the one at Niagara Falls) of Nikola Tesla in front of the University of Belgrade's Department of Electrical Engineering (http://rti.etf.bg.ac.yu/rti/homegifs/tesla.jpg). Please include this in the article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 155.210.152.221 (talk) 12:04, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
I'm not really sure if this is classified as a monument or not, but the International Airport in Belgrade, Serbia is now called the Nikola Tesla airport. -LJ
This article lists Nikola Tesla's birthdate as July 10th at the top, but in this Monuments section it says July 9th.
Tesla was not born in Croatian Krajina, such thing didn't even existed, someone made it up and he is persistent,Tesla was born in the province of Lika, Croatia—then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. And that is the way it should write I canon delete this Croatian Krajina and I am asking Wikipedia to delete it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Stefo665 (talk • contribs) 15:23, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
"anti-Semitist"
I doubt about the claim of his "sporadic anti-Semitism”. First of all, I believe that he term is self-contradicting: it expresses an –ism (that means an concept, an ideology), but which is sporadic (word that expresses non regular occurring). Most importantly, the clue in which it supports what it claims it is only based in someone’s record of an out of context phrase spoken in everyday manner. I delete the phrase. I think we there is a kind of a fanatic anti-anti- Semitism emerging in our days. You really have to count your words otherwise you will be called anti-Semitist.
Soklamon 13:58, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
- Honestly, Tesla may have just been joking when he said that... --George D. Božović 15:38, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
The Prestige
It is quite clear in the film that the machine Tesla builds is more than simply an illusion: it creates an exact double of the subject. As such, I changed "he is called upon to build an electrical machine to simulate an illusion of teleportation" to "he is called upon to build an electrical machine capable of teleporting a human being. The machine works, but instead of teleporting someone it makes an exact clone." Demosthenes X 21:16, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
There is no proof that Tesla's machine ever worked, it is rumored that the machine never actually worked and that it was all part of the Prestige of the film itself, the part where it is seen that Angiers kills the clone might not be true. The dead body of Angier might be the double he used 2 years before with his act "The New Transported Man". Zae 22:49, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
- And all the duplicated hats ? And all the other tanks in storage ? -- Beardo 11:36, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
The sentence in the first paragraph "The machine works, but instead of teleporting someone it makes an exact clone." is correct, but the one that actually appears in the article is not: "but in addition to teleporting the subject, it also makes an exact clone." The machine does not teleport - it only makes a clone (some distance away from the machine). The only reason the machine allows Angier to appear to be teleported is because he uses a trap-door. Remember that even Tesla was not aware that the machine was making clones because the object (hats and cats) never moved from their position in the machine. [Movie spoiler!] And in regard to the 2nd paragraph above, because of all the duplicated hats and all the tanks in storage, you are shown that the machine makes a clone every time. Angier never knew when Borden would go under the stage, so he was drowned every night - his clone then appeared elsewhere to be the victim the next night. This process would only stop when Borden went below stage and could then be framed for the clone's death. If there were only the one double that Angier used earlier, he would have to know when Borden would find the drowning double. Utterbee6 19:28, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
It's unclear if the machine teleported the original and made a clone in its place or made a clone appear in another location. Angier said himself he never knew if he'd be in the box or in the Prestige. 68.166.65.221 18:59, 20 September 2007 (UTC)
Mother's death date
The article (currently) says his mother died in 1892. This looks wrong in the context of the rest of the article, and it looks like this is a typo for 1882. Can someone with access to the sources used to write that sentence please check and correct if needed. Thanks. Carcharoth 23:21, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
Serb/Croat arguments
It appears that Serb and Croat nationalists have decided to make this talk page a battleground for their squabbling over Tesla's ethnicity. The talk page for the 0.999... article has a special page where arguments against the proofs given in the article are placed (to avoid cluttering up the main talk page with unproductive comments). Would anyone object to the same being done here for the serb/croat stuff? Simões (talk/contribs) 14:03, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- There's no productive discussion going on anyway. It's almost all anonymous nationalists on either side flaming each other. This isn't suitable for a talk page full stop. Chris Cunningham 14:05, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
- Odd, because the article itself is so good. I think the idea has merit, although I would miss the fights. Karldoh 14:03, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
Update: It's funny how fast another ethnicity argument started. The subtalkpage is born, and things are already a lot quieter. Good day! Simões (talk/contribs) 15:08, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
It's all so silly. Croats and Serbs should just be proud that he's from the Balkans and then consider the fact that he wouldn't give a rat's a** about them since one of his proudest moments was becoming an American. haha Maîtresse 07:46, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
Monument for Tesla is listed in wrong location
The monument for Nikola Tesla at Niagara Falls is in Queen Victoria Park, Ontario, Canada. It is currently listed as being in New York, USA. I just visited the site last week and posed for pictures with the beautiful statue. It is located behind the area where the Table Rock inscription is in the park.74.121.207.240 15:17, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
Editors at the removing referenced and notable information about Nikola Tesla.
This is the section they are removing ...
- In 1899, the eccentric Nikola Tesla, in accord with many other plans of his, planned to build a tower in a experimental station at Colorado topped by a copper ball that he would turn into a sensitive radio telescope.[2][3] While investigating atmospheric electricity in 1900, Tesla noted repetitive signals that he deduced must be coming from a non-terrestrial source. Although Tesla mistook this to be radio communication from intelligent beings living on Venus or Mars[4] it may have been the earliest observation of an astronomical radio source (A 1996 analysis indicated Tesla may have been observing Jovian plasma torus signals).[5]
References
- ^ Kelley, Thomas Lee, "The enigma of Nikola Tesla". Arizona State University. [Thesis] (PDF)
- ^ Eric Brus, Richard Golob (1990). The Almanac of Science and Technology: What's New and What's Known. 530 pages. Page 52.
- ^ Margaret Cheney, Robert Uth, Jim Glenn (1999). Tesla, Master of Lightning. 184 pages. Page 95.
- ^ Tesla, Nikola, "Talking with Planets". Collier's Weekly, February 19, 1901. (EarlyRadioHistory.us)
- ^ Corum, K. L., J. F. Corum, "Nikola Tesla and the Planetary Radio Signals".
Any help would be appreciated in keeping the information there ... J. D. Redding 04:53, 19 May 2007 (UTC)
- Although this seems to be a documented occurrence, describing it as "Tesla being the inventor of Radio astronomy" (as found in much Tesla literature and fan sites) is not supportable by the facts. See Talk:Radio astronomy#Furhter discussion for futher talk on this. Halfblue 13:08, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
Wireless power transmission
Citations for wireless power transmission.
- Elroy McKendree Avery, Elementary Physics. Sheldon and company, 1897. 317 pages. Page 301
J. D. Redding 23:27, 25 May 2007 (UTC)
Queen Victoria Park - please make correction
The "Monuments" section of the Nikola Tesla article mistakenly places Queen Victoria Park in Niagara Falls, New York. In fact, Queen Victoria Park is in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. The caption to the photo of the monument gets it right. Please note also that "Niagara" is mispelt in this section. The confusion no doubt arose because both the American and Canadian cities of Niagara Falls have monuments to Tesla. Gsmck 04:05, 26 May 2007 (UTC)
Made the note/correction awhile back. Thanks for suggesting that. J. D. Redding 16:43, 30 May 2007 (UTC)
Teslascope
Other inventions
Tesla is known for the invention of the Teslascope, a radio transmitter designed with the intention of communicating with extraterrestrial life on other planets.
Removed above to talk because it is not s "true" statement. The sources on this point out that the Teslascope may be the fictional invention of Arthur H. Matthews the writer of the book "The wall of light; Nikola Tesla and the Venusians space ship, the X-12", or it could be a Tesla idea. The one thing you can't state flat out is that Tesla did invent this... so needs to be re-writen. This also means that listing this device under a heading "Electromechanical devices and principles developed by Nikola Tesla" would be incorrect.Halfblue 20:36, 2 June 2007 (UTC)
- I have re-intergrated this information into the article in a more factual form. Also removed "Teslascope" from "Electromechanical devices and principles developed by Nikola Tesla" for reason given in summery. Halfblue 12:59, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
External link request
I'd like to suggest this essay by Mark Pilkington as an external link:
http://www.forteantimes.com/features/profiles/78/nikola_tesla.html
I am the editor of the site, so I'm suggesting it rather than adding it in myself
Confusion in "Later Years"
In this section of the article there is the line: "After the war ended, Tesla made predictions regarding the relevant issues of the post-World War I environment, in a printed article (20 December 1914)." I find this desciption confusing because it states "After the war ended", but then cites the date "20 December 1914". The War, of course, began in 1914, so how could he have commented on something "after the war" in the same year it began? Kirkesque 22:28, 15 July 2007 (UTC)
Inconsistencies of dates in "Early Years"
At the end of the paragraph "Hungary and France", there is a blurb about Tesla running from Paris to see his dying mother. His mother died in 1892, but he moved to the US in 1884, and apparently gained citizenship in 1891. Which means he was no longer in Paris when his mother died. And I doubt he could "hasten" to see his mother just hours before she died, because at that time transatlantic flights were quite scarce. In addition, if he really went to see his mother in 1892, then it should be in the following paragraph, "Middle years", as this paragraph starts in 1886, and documents him being the vice-president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers from 1892 to 1894. 213.114.83.242 11:43, 9 August 2007 (UTC)
What patents?
The article presently says "Tesla said he worked night and day to redesign them and gave the Edison company several profitable new patents in the process." If this is true, then the article should include the numbers of the U.S. (or non U.S. patents) that resulted from Tesla's work. I have not been able to find any such patents. Thanks. Edison 05:46, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
Tesla worked for Edison, beginning 1884, in the 300s and, perhaps, 400s range of Edison's patents. Edison routinely placed the patents worked on by other workers in his name. By recorded accounts, Tesla worked on Edison's Dynamo-Electric Machine and Electrical Generator designs. This is widely known in the biographies of Tesla. J. D. Redding 15:18, 8 September 2007 (UTC)
POV
"During this period, in the United States, Tesla's fame rivaled that of any other inventor or scientist in history or popular culture"- Inspite of the reference, this sounds dubious to me. Is it implied that Tesla's fame was more even than Edison's in the public imagination? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ashujo (talk • contribs) 22:16, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
To what extent is AC "more efficient" than DC? It is not correct as it stands, and needs qulification at the least - suggest simple removal of those two mords.
Vlach origin
I think I have fully dug into this issue and understood it. Who was the one who introduced this in the first place again? --PaxEquilibrium 12:07, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
- Is someone trying to suggest he was a descendent of Dracula???--Jack Upland (talk) 09:03, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Asperger syndrome
Tesla is the subject of Chapter 10 of this new book:
Fitzgerald, Michael, O’Brien, Brendan (2007) Genius genes: how Asperger talents changed the world. Autism Asperger Publishing Company, 2007.
In this essay about autism written by the President of the Association for Psychological Science she lists Tesla as one of a number of "historical figures who fit current diagnostic criteria".
Gernsbacher, Morton Ann (2007) A conspicuous absence of scientific leadership: the illusory epidemic of autism. http://jepson.richmond.edu/academics/projects/ESSAYGernsbacher.pdf
Are we going to ignore this? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 124.169.199.35 (talk) 13:43, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
- There are a number of posthumous diagnoses for famous figures. These are inherently attention-seeking and speculative.--Jack Upland (talk) 09:13, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I would not automatically dismiss all posthumous diagnoses as "inherently attention-seeking and speculative." Neither would I immediately accept claims that historical figures had some disease or condition. The question is whether the diagnosis comes from a reliable source and whether it satisfies verifiability. Does the source have a reputation for fact checking and accuracy? Is it a refereed scholarly journal or a self-published source? Is the method of making retrospective diagnoses regarded as accurate by the appropriate scientific bodies, such as the medical community or the psychological community? Morton Ann Gernsbacher is indeed president of the major American body for psychological science, Association for Psychological Science, giving this some degree of credibility. There may be a bias operating in which people with a condition or who work with people having the condition want to adopt famous people into their community by announcing that THEY had the condition, too, whether it is epilepsy or Aspergers. Something published by the "Autism Asperger Publishing Company" might appear to have an advocacy position more than if the publisher were a major university. This could be brought to the Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard to get the views of editors who are knowledgable of Wikipedia's reliable sources requirements. Edison (talk) 21:40, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
- Edison, his biographers have cited that he may have had Asperger. J. D. Redding
Hoover citation
The bit about J. Edgar Hoover declaring Tesla's papers top secret has a citation that just says "Hoover, J. Edgar et al". So the source for a comment allegedly made by Hoover is Hoover? How is this a citation if there's no mention of a source in which it is recorded that he actually said that? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.126.132.70 (talk) 13:19, 12 May 2009 (UTC)
grammatical error
in the first paragraph: Tesla is often described an important scientist and inventor of the modern age, a man who "shed light over the face of Earth". it should read: Tesla is often described as an important scientist and inventor of the modern age, a man who "shed light over the face of Earth". —Preceding unsigned comment added by X CheshireCat x (talk • contribs) 16:45, 11 May 2009 (UTC) cheers!X CheshireCat x (talk) 16:49, 11 May 2009 (UTC)
- Fixed -- OlEnglish (Talk) 05:43, 12 May 2009 (UTC)
Relatives
Famous Serbian basketball coach, Dušan Ivković, just said in interview for RTS, emission Balkanskom ulicom, that he is close cousin to Nikola Tesla by both mothers' side, so you should add that fact to the article, please. Also can you put the photo of Belgrade airport which brings Tesla's name? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.86.15.58 (talk) 13:41, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
Croatian Krajina
That term never officaly existed. It is a region which was called like that but it's officialy called Lika.--(GriffinSB) (talk) 11:44, 30 December 2007 (UTC)
- Please see the article talk archives. This is a compromise solution, and no term is perfect. Chris Cunningham (talk) 12:22, 30 December 2007 (UTC)
- I dont deny that Tesla came from the territory of modern day Croatia yet we cant invent a name of "Croatian Krajina" since it's never been called that in history. The term is a wikipedia invented term to describe the Austrian military border or simply called "military border" in Serbian "Vojna Krajina (Krajina=Border)". Thus we cant attribute the place of birth of Tesla by an unrecognised, incorrect term for the region.Mike Babic (talk) 04:16, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
- I was among the warmest defensors of "Croatian Krajina" though totally unacquainted with historical geography of Austrian Empire ; I took a few minutes to check your assertion, which is to be taken seriously. I just searched through Google Books, and found this source (an Austrian book from 1856, Die österreichische Monarchie, geographisch, statistisch, topographisch) where I can read : Hiervon kommen 8 Regimenter und si (?) Militär-Comnninitäten auf die eigentliche Kroatische Militärgrenze (288,„ Q, 2», und 53N,Nl4 E,, im I, l85l>, welche geschichtlich zerfällt in die Eorlstädter, die Banal- und die Warasdiner Grenze, see also this example (from 1851). Though I am not ready to play the game to try to understand primary sources from an exotic country in a language I don't master, your assertion according to which "Croatian Krajina" would be a "wikipedia invented term" does not seem true, and you should demonstrate it more thoroughly if you want to make your point. Note that on Wikipedia, at least on Wikipedia in German, (see the articlede:Militärgrenze), "Croatian Krajina" is not supposed to be synonymous of "Military Border" but only the westernmost part of this military border. French Tourist (talk) 12:03, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
- I dont deny that Tesla came from the territory of modern day Croatia yet we cant invent a name of "Croatian Krajina" since it's never been called that in history. The term is a wikipedia invented term to describe the Austrian military border or simply called "military border" in Serbian "Vojna Krajina (Krajina=Border)". Thus we cant attribute the place of birth of Tesla by an unrecognised, incorrect term for the region.Mike Babic (talk) 04:16, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
BTW, while answering you, I noticed this diff, about one month ago, which seems to be erroneous (I am not 100 % sure, but I chose to revert it - this is the safe side in doubt). I don't think the Croatian Military Border was (or at least was obviously) part of Hungary in 1856. If somebody wants to reinsert mentions of Kingdom of Hungary for Tesla's birth, he should defend his insertion here or rather on the specialized page about ethnicity (though this is not exactly about Tesla's ethnicity but rather an administrative problem). French Tourist (talk) 13:35, 13 April 2009 (UTC)
"Death"
From this book written by a relative of Nicola Tesla: The life and times of Nikola Tesla Biography of a Genius - Marc J. Seifer
80 Trunks. According to Seifer they were "Drums". Wooden casks of the era.
There is also a picture of the "Death Ray" Particle Beam weapon in Seifers book. page 470 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.227.18.70 (talk) 08:53, 7 January 2009 (UTC)
In those 80 trunks perhaps year 2,3,4,5 and 6 of the Colorado Notes that were published for 1899-1900. Seifer is a handwriting expert but do not know if he has read the secret note of Tesla. See the published birthday announcements in "Tesla Said" as he raves about a 18M volt 'bulb' that is most likely solid aluminum in a hemisphere to focus beams to the planets as he also mentions. He said he had working equipment and guess people indeed wanted to know more.Teslafieldmachine (talk) 02:31, 12 January 2009 (UTC)
"Robots"???
The last paragraph of "Middle years" quotes Tesla as saying in 1898: "You see there the first of a race of robots, mechanical men which will do the laborious work of the human race." However, the term "robot" is generally believed to come from Karel Čapek's 1920 play, see robot#Etymology. Thus, this quote is doubtful. Rune Kock (talk) 19:04, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
- PBS http://www.pbs.org/tesla/ll/ll_robots.html
- The quote seems to be backed by this reputable website. robot#Etymology should be updated ... or made clearer when the term was dispersed to the general population. Tesla may have been ahead of the curve ... as usual. J. D. Redding 04:48, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
The play is universally considered to be the origin of the English term. Robot is derived from the Slavic word for worker. Is it possible that since Tesla was Slavic in origin, there is a linguistic leap in the translation here?--Jack Upland (talk) 09:16, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- Highly unlikely. In BCMSxyz, the only meaning of "robot" is the one originating from Čapek's book. Zocky | picture popups 00:31, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
- We need a citation to an 1898 publication with the purported 1898 usage of "robot" by Tesla, to make sure this isn't a paraphrase created in the 1940's by biographer O'Neill, who was not always a careful scholar. The demonstration of the wireless remote control boat in New York City in 1898 was covered in the media, and the quote might be found in the period coverage. "Robotics and Automation Handbook" By Thomas R. Kurfess [33] talks about the Tesla 1898 demonstration in 1.1.3, but on the next page says that the term "robot" for such a device dates only from Capek in 1920. Edison (talk) 19:58, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
- The term is Old Church Slavonic. The term may have been in use ... Tesla came from the Old Church Slavonic and may have naturally used it.
- From http://www.pbs.org/tesla/ll/ll_robots.html:
- "Tesla quickly corrected the reporter: "You do not see there a wireless torpedo, you see there the first of a race of robots, mechanical men which will do the laborious work of the human race."
- Just a note. J. D. Redding
category tag
incorrectly tagged as American inventor?--Billymac00 (talk) 17:28, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
- I wouldn't think so: the American categories could apply as he spent a significant amount of his time living and working in America. He may not have been "ethnically" American, but then again it can be tough to argue what exactly an "ethnic American" would be. --Bossi (talk • gallery • contrib) 17:56, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
- He became a naturalized citizen .. there is no error. J. D. Redding 14:43, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
Live Theatre
Why is "live theatre" included in this article but "popular culture" exiled to its own article? Does the fact that culture's popular weigh in against it???--Jack Upland (talk) 09:18, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
- I think the Tesla in Live Theater would fit better in the "Tesla in Popular Culture" article. Cut and paste job for the most part. Amiaheroyet (talk) 01:45, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
- Agreed and moved. Hark80 (talk) 19:14, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
I don't understand the structure of a sentence and I don't think I'm alone
This sentence here: At Tesla's salary of $18 per week, the bonus would have amounted to over 53 years pay, and the amount was equal to the initial capital of the company.[29]
What does the 53 years of pay mean anyway? I think it is ambiguous. Someone please let me know.
Lucgallant (talk) 03:39, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
- Sounds to me like 53 years of $18 a week. Bassg☢☢nist T C 18:30, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
- As in "He did a nice job. Let's give him a bonus equal to the initial capital of the whole company, or the pay he would earn in 53 years of employment at his present salary." Edison (talk) 19:41, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
help —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.241.101.115 (talk) 20:05, 16 February 2008 (UTC)
Tesla demurred at the concept concerning Professor Lodge's view that electricity was a mode of manifestation of the aether. He did not object to an aether associated with matter, or 'bound aether'.
ref: John Joseph Fahie, A History of Wireless Telegraphy. W. Blackwood and Sons 1902. Page 139-140.
J. D. Redding 01:25, 29 February 2008 (UTC)
Milutin Tesla's birthplace
In the "Early Years" section, the birthplace of Milutin Tesla, Nikola Tesla's father, is listed as "Meduc." It's actually Raduc. Raduc, an ethnic Serb village in Medak County (Lika) was the home of the Tesla family from the time Milutin's father, also called Nikola Tesla, settled there in the 1810's until 1995, when they were ethnically cleansed along with all of the other ethnic Serbs in the region during the Croatian offensive Operation Storm. (They now reside mostly in the Belgrade area of Serbia.) 24.12.81.102 (talk) 05:17, 3 March 2008 (UTC)Milan Pejnovich March 2, 2008
- Perhaps you may wish to edit the article and update that fact? --George D. Božović (talk) 21:20, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
Tesla's Million Dollar Folly - says who?
I have searched high and low for the "Newspaper" that claimed to have that headline and I can't find it anywhere. Every place I look has the exact same line
Newspapers of the time labeled Wardenclyffe "Tesla's million-dollar folly."
or some form of that. No where is there any reference to WHAT newspapers said it. It seems with the plural usage of it there must be multiple papers, but there is never a listing of the source who said that. Can anyone clarify this? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.186.179.198 (talk) 01:23, 28 March 2008 (UTC)
- I searched too and couldn't come up with anything as well. (Slapshot24 (talk) 16:21, 31 March 2008 (UTC))
- Read Siefer ... I think he mentions it. Seems to be no online source ... but his biographers mention it, IIRC. If i get to one of my bio books, I'll put in the ref ... J. D. Redding 04:50, 16 April 2008 (UTC)
- I searched too and couldn't come up with anything as well. (Slapshot24 (talk) 16:21, 31 March 2008 (UTC))
- Just a side note ... his folly was the construction of a power delivery system ... which his finacial backers refused to bankroll. The folly was not the physics and engineering of the facility. I can't remember if it was J. P. Morgan's son that finally cut Tesla off or not .. anyways ... J. D. Redding 14:13, 16 April 2008 (UTC)
Tesla had many labs and experimental stations. Siefer paints an uncalled for downer, and somehow common knowledge, picture of Tesla's finances and buildings. The Colorado Springs station may have been used for five more years after 1900 and not as short a history given to the main wiki page. John Jacob Astor, noted SiFi author in his time, was a backer of Tesla until the Titanic took him in 1912. In 1914 Tesla sold many inventions to Germany's Von Tirpitz . A strange location in Los Alamos Technical Area 33 had giant conical coil forms devoid of the copper wire. That building still stands and is secreted as being radioactive. Imagine, Tesla's copper wire, from the Guggenheim's perhaps, being ripped off by Los Alamos grounds keepers. Perhaps not the only Atomic site that once held experiments by Tesla.Teslafieldmachine (talk) 03:42, 12 January 2009 (UTC)
Wikipedia page featured in graphic novel
Anyone noticed that Nikola Tesla's Wikipedia page is featured towards the back of the graphic novel, "Southland Tales: The Prequel Saga"?--DrWho42 (talk) 21:01, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
Invented squirrel cage fan?
Did Tesla invent the squirrel cage fan? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sleepersix (talk • contribs) 16:06, 10 April 2008 (UTC) I ran a very large squirrel cage motor generator but never told if Tesla invented anything, not even the fluorescent bulb. My dad said Tesla invented the radio and other than a few years ago found little on Tesla or his radio.Teslafieldmachine (talk) 02:53, 12 January 2009 (UTC)
Please add the interwiki link to la:
la:Nicolaus Tesla Thanks. --Roland2 (talk) 10:54, 13 April 2008 (UTC)
- Done. --Bossi (talk • gallery • contrib) 16:37, 13 April 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks --Roland2 (talk) 22:48, 13 April 2008 (UTC)
What? Nothing about Niagara falls?
Gee, this huge long article about one of the greatest inventors/engineers of our time with no mention of WHY there are monuments and plaques at Niagara falls? According to the book "Wizard" (see notes), it was an illustration of Niagara falls in a book that he read when he was young that inspired him to consider working with electricity in the first place. He tried to imagine how all that power could be redirected to run factories and such. He built the first large-scale hydroelectric facility there. He was concerned that fossil fuels would eventually run out and imagined that Niagara falls, if harnessed, might have all the limitless energy we would ever need. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 153.2.246.32 (talk) 16:49, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
- Become a contributor. Add it to the article. Rsduhamel (talk) 21:37, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
The Emperor's Clothes
How can it be that, and I quote from the article 'Tesla's patents and theoretical work formed the basis of modern alternating current electric power (AC) systems'? The world's first AC power systems were in England. (See the Wikipedia article on Electrical power industry )
Towns in England such as Godalming and Holborn were being powered by electric grids using AC current long before the Americans and Tesla in particular copied the idea.
A.C. power systems vary in their design from country to country. Is the author implying that some countries methods of distributing power are not 'modern' and what does 'form the basis of' mean? You could equally argue that any number of early electrical pioneers work 'forms the basis of AC power systems.
~~'Parochial View'~~ 5th June 2008 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.9.138.200 (talk) 11:20, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
I don't know about the details of AC systems before Tesla. However, the way I understand this is that emphasis is on it being modern. I suspect that the most probable advancement in question is using transformers to step up the voltage for long transmission lines and step it down at or near the consumer end. Tesla also perfected induction motors and generators. To resolve this we would have to find hard data those towns in England, to see what they used, for example... --Aleksandar Šušnjar (talk) 19:09, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
Death
I find it interesting how nobody ever mentions the mysterious circumstances surrounding his death, i've read that he was supposedly run over by a car after he planned on revealing something big which i can't remember right now, but maybe he wasn't such a mad scientist after all. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 58.107.216.157 (talk) 10:09, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
Now I'm not saying this is right or that I believe it, but it is an interesting possibility according to this source: http://www.proliberty.com/observer/20070405.htm tesla was murdered by Otto Skorzeny, yes the nazi, and he admitted to it on his death bed. there's some other interesting possibilities in there too. --67.185.248.120 (talk) 09:19, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
The visitation by FBI at the time of his death might only be traced by papers and people of that time. Consequently publications are scanned to avoid too much information. Tesla made too many birthday announcements about 18M volt bulbs (for power beams) and got some wanting a look see. See the "Tesla Said" compilation with material not posted. Tesla's words are public domain.Teslafieldmachine (talk) 00:54, 12 January 2009 (UTC)
Tesla's Doctorate
Is it right to call him Dr. Nikola Tesla? I understand he never graduated fully from the university in Graz, but surely he was awarded a doctorate considering his research and scientific standards? Mogtheforgetfulcat (talk) 00:19, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
I would think so, based upon his prolific research and development work. Tesla actually received many honorary doctorates. These included honorary doctorates from Columbia College, New York on June 13, 1894, the Vienna University of Technology, Vienna on May 24, 1908, the Faculty of Engineering, University of Belgrade on June 15, 1926, the University of Zagreb, Croatia, Zagreb on June 29, 1926, the Czech University of Technology in Prague on November 28, 1936, the University of Poitiers, Poitiers, France on January 6, 1937, the University of Technology of Dr. Edvard Benes in Brno, Czech Republic on April 10, 1937, and the Paris Sorbonne University, Paris on November 6, 1937. These can be seen on the Tesla Memorial Society of New York site at http://www.teslasociety.com/tesladiploma.htm Bert (talk) 04:05, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
Thanks Bert. With that in mind, I may change his title on this article to 'Dr.', linking to those references, if there are no objections? Mogtheforgetfulcat (talk) 11:44, 17 June 2008 (UTC)Didnt se a mentiuon,maybe overloked same? Of Tesla Society here in the US. Nor, the Tesla Remeberance day/Global energy Independence Day procliamed in Los Angeles, California USA July.10th 2005 July 10th,the birthdate of Nikola Tesla
I've updated it, I'll add the reference - when I figure out how to! Mogtheforgetfulcat (talk) 00:59, 20 June 2008 (UTC)
We do not call people "Doctor" or "Professor" in Wikipedia articles. It is sufficient to state that someone won an earned or honorary degree, then just refer to him as "Tesla." Edison (talk) 05:16, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
Top Picture
What happened to the pitcure of Telsa? The one now isnt as good as the one that used to be at the top of the page! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.75.138.98 (talk) 10:44, 1 July 2008 (UTC)
Hawthorne
"Tesla's friend Hawthorne wrote that 'seldom did one meet a scientist or engineer who was also a poet, a philosopher, an appreciator of fine music, a linguist, and a connoisseur of food and drink'." Hawthorne who? He isn't mentioned anywhere else in the article. Nathaniel Hawthorne? —Preceding unsigned comment added by BethelRunner (talk • contribs) 01:21, 5 August 2008 (UTC) 为何这样非凡的科学家会被历史淡忘呢?从未有人传颂?因为他那些另类发明虽然对人类有著重大的贡献,但与此同时欲促使很多赚钱的企业瞬间倒闭,打压他的人有Thomas Edison,支持过他又抛弃了他的J. Pierpont Morgan等,在他死后美国政府人工秘密删除了有关他的历史记载和报道,他的研究成果大部分被收缴并列入高级机密,所以他的名字被抹去了。 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 222.94.131.45 (talk) 13:02, 17 June 2009 (UTC)
- Google Translate claims that the above statement is "Because although his invention of an alternative has a significant contribution to mankind, but at the same time has led many to make money For the moment the closure of enterprises, to suppress his people have Thomas Edison, also abandoned his support of his, such as J. Pierpont Morgan, in the after his death a secret U.S. government manual, he deleted the history records and reports, most of his research results have been collected and included high-level secrets, so his name was erased."
- From random googling, it seems likely that the friend was Julian Hawthorne. --Alvestrand (talk) 13:36, 17 June 2009 (UTC)
Tesla and Edison
The tone of the section seems to express the personal doubts of the writer. Unless there is a citation of a consensus of historians to the same doubt, the section should be rewritten as NPOV. Rsduhamel (talk) 21:34, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
Moon Palace?
should
- Auster, Paul, "Moon Palace", 1989. Tells Tesla's story - among other's - within the history of the United States.
be in books? J. D. Redding 16:24, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Page protection needed?
Between the frequent random vandals and the edit warring Serbs & Croats engaged in their tug of war over Tesla's identity, the article doesn't stay stable for very long. Should full protection be applied for? If granted (which is by no means certain) it would make legitimate edits more difficult to accomplish, and sooner or later the protection would expire anyway, leaving the same problems to resume. Any thoughts on page protection, pro or con?
An alternative is for all who monitor this page to quickly return it to a clean version based on the cited references. Hertz1888 (talk) 15:50, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
- For the tug of war over Tesla's identity, I've tried now another solution. I have no idea why vandalism is so more frequent on this article than on others, but maybe we should live with it. --Cyfal (talk) 21:41, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
- I'd like to see this article forever protected from new and anon IP editors. Whether it is or not, I'm dedicated to checking its status every time I log on to WP. This Serb versus Croat crap disgusts me... If Tesla could rise above it, why can't we? Binksternet (talk) 21:49, 25 September 2008 (UTC)
- I would like to third that... I find it disturbing at times when I come to read about one of my idols and to find it having been deliberately corrupted. But; I will do just that. Revert back to the old page whenever I encounter attacks in the tug of war. Citybug (talk) 13:18, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
- There's no tug of war. Tesla's father was a Serb Orthodox priest, his mother from a famous Serbian family. Tesla was born in Austria. He never had a "Croatian citizenship", he never called himself a Croat, he always emphasized his Serbian ethnicity. It's just that his village is now in Croatia, and to some, that makes him a Croat. Oooo :P --GOD OF JUSTICE 00:56, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- I would like to third that... I find it disturbing at times when I come to read about one of my idols and to find it having been deliberately corrupted. But; I will do just that. Revert back to the old page whenever I encounter attacks in the tug of war. Citybug (talk) 13:18, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
- Tesla called Ruđer Bošković his "countryman". Also, let's not forget Tesla's sentence: "Ponosim se srpskim rodom i hrvatskom domovinom", or in English: "I'm proud of Serbian origin and Croatian homeland". So, Avdo, your statement above is not correct. DarkoS (talk) 13:32, 24 January 2009 (UTC)
- You are welcome to open a discussion of such matters on this page—in a section of their own—and seek consensus for any proposed changes. Whatever changes are made need to be reliably sourced and, if necessary, balanced with the existing sourcing and carefully explained. Without a consensus it just goes back and forth, and without sourcing it will quickly be reverted. Hertz1888 (talk) 02:02, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
- Perhaps the Austro-Hungarians should chime in here, since he was born as a subject of that empire, in their military frontier. Edison (talk) 05:12, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
Why British version of English?
Wikipedia has a guideline, WP:ENGVAR, to determine whether U.S. or British spelling and vocabulary should be used in an article. It says that if one variety of English is the first one used in an article, then that variety should be used exclusively, unless there is a strong tie to a country with a particular variety of English. A recent edit [34] by Bobo192 changed "honors" to "honours" on the grounds that British spelling was standard for this article. The spelling "honor" was the first disambiguation of national variety of English, in this edit [35] from 18 September 2002. "Rumor" (rather than "rumour") was introduced [36]15 August 2003. That argues for the U.S. variant of English, as does the fact that Tesla was a U.S. citizen. He was never a citizen of the U.K., didn't live there, and didn't work there, so both his ties to the U.S. and the first disambiguation by the edit cited call for the use of U.S. spelling in the article. Both spellings appear numerous times in the article at present, and it is jarring. The spelling should consistently be the U.S. variety for the reasons stated, to comply with style guidelines. Edison (talk) 03:08, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
the appearance of nicola tesla
I suppose the image of Tesla has been mythimized over the years.His contemporary sculptur depicted him as a hook-nosed man but banknotes's image is quiute different,with Tesla having a straight nose.Where does the truth lie? Frank Russian (talk) 11:27, 2 November 2008 (UTC)
Fallout 3
Unknown if this is important or not, however, Nikola Tesla and You is an item which can be found in Fallout 3. See [Here]. One would assume that this information could be applied to the main page (by someone with a little more knowledge about how wikipedia works than myself) under a "Nikola Tesla in Popular Culture" mini section or something of the like. In my opinion, this information is relevant to the Nikola Tesla page. Even looking at the image of the in-game item, it somewhat characetures Nikola himself. --90.197.0.19 (talk) 18:27, 25 December 2008 (UTC) (Not A Registered Member)
- No, per WP:TRIVIA. We Wikipedians try to avoid unnecessary trivial information. Thanks for your input though. --Soetermans | is listening | what he'd do now? 12:44, 4 January 2009 (UTC)
Patents and Inventions
Nilola Tesla is one of the least recognized geniuses of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
There is a list of all his patents in the book: The Complete Patents of Nikola Tesla, Edited by Jim Glenn, ₢ 1994 by Barnes and Noble, Inc.; ISBN 1-56619-266-8.
This lists the first patent for an electro-magnetic motor built without a comutator (381968), the first system of electrical transmission of power (382281, 487796), and the basis of radio transmitter-receiver systems (645576).
What is amazing is that Tesla had held the patent for AC generation and transmision just when George Westinghouse was trying to win the Current Wars with T. Edison. Because Westinghouse asked Tesla to not hold him to their agreement, (Tesla would get about $2 per horsepower generated), Tesla tore up his patents. So it is ironic that later when Tesla needed money, for some reason the Westinghouse company was not able to be very accomadating.
UoPTucson (talk) 08:00, 23 January 2009 (UTC) UoPTucson
Why is there no invention of his cloning device? It was built on spec for Lord Couldlow.
Factualrunner (talk) 11:34, 20 February 2009 (UTC)
Birthdate
The July 10th birth date listed in the article may not be accurate. I have seen a great many articles that have the birth date as July 9th. Seeing as how he was supposedly born at midnight, does anyone have any reliable information as to which day he was actually born? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Wyvern t (talk • contribs) 19:50, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
- I have searched my sources, and he was apparently born exactly at midnight between the 9th and 10th. Saying he was born exactly at midnight, I believe it should remain the 10th. It is a highly disputed thing on the web, but I think officially midnight is considered the next day. Maybe there should be a little insert at the beginning of the page or the early life section that says he was born exactly at midnight?Aswed123123123 (talk) 05:08, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
Why has Galileo Ferraris never been mentioned?
Considering that most of the books dealing with AC motors and rotating magnetic field refers to both Tesla and Ferraris as the main personalities involved in the development of the polyphase technology, it seems quite strange that the author has completely neglected the fundamental contributions given by the italian scientist. The speech: "In the same year, Tesla conceived the induction motor..." is not a rigorous description of the steps leading to the paternity of the idea. Did Tesla gain wide acceptance of his "conceived" discovery by the scientific/academic comunity in 1882 ? Despite Galileo Ferraris deliberately refused to patent his inventions he publicly demonstrated the working principle of the rotating magnetic field in the summer of 1885, three years before Tesla's AC motor patents; models of the AC motors used during the experiments performed in 1885 by Ferraris can be seen at IEN institute (Turin-Italy). 151.50.28.75 (talk) 15:16, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
Citizenship
The Austrian empire came to an end in 1867, how could he be a citizen until 1891? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.220.69.46 (talk) 03:18, 26 February 2009 (UTC)
- statement : "Born in Smiljan, Croatian Krajina, Austrian Empire, he was an ethnic Serb subject of the Austrian Empire" is compromise. All this statements are right for year of his birth and until 1867, but latter is another story. Between 1867 and 1881 he was: ethnic Serb from Croatian Krajina, subject of the Austro-Hungary and between 1881-84 he was ethnic Serb from Kingdom of Croatia in personal union with Austro-Hungary. after 1884 Tesla is american citizen.--Rjecina (talk) 04:51, 26 February 2009 (UTC)
NO MENTION OF HAARP
STRANGE THAT THERE IS NO MENTION OF HAARP. THE NEW YORK FIRE OR EXPLOSION WAS CAUSED BY AN EXPERIMENT TO LIQUEFY HYDROGEN. LATER A CO WORKER NAMED LINDE GETS THIS PATENT. THE UNITED STATES STEEL SOUTH WORKS IN CHICAGO(USED TO BE AT 79TH & SOUTH SHORE DRIVE) UTILIZED 25HZ AC POWER FROM NIAGARA FALLS.TESLA ALSO TOOK AN X-RAY OF MARK TWAIN! THE BATTLE OF THE CURRENTS CLIMAXED AT THE 1893 COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION WITH THE AC ELECTRIC CHAIR THOUGHT TO BE MORE HUMANE THAN THE DC ELECTRIC CHAIR. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.115.228.74 (talk) 03:09, 1 March 2009 (UTC)
No Mention of Tesla remeberance Day celebrated in Serbia and Croatia Jul.10th
No mention in Tesla article about Tesla Remeberance day ceklebrated BOTH in Serbika and Croatia on Nikola Teslas Birthdate Jul.10th! Celebrated in the US since July 2005(Tesla Society citation) as Global Energy Independence Day.To remember Dr.Teslas life and work.And to promote alternative CLEAN GREEN energy sources!Teslaguy (talk) 02:46, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
OK ARE THERE VOICE RECORDINGS/NEWSREELS OF TESLA SPEAKING?
EDISON,HENRY FORD AND MANY OTHERS .HAVE VOICE RECORDINGS. YET, THERE SEEMS TO BE NO VOICE OR EVEN OLD NEWSREEL RECORDINGS OF NIKOLA TESLA SPEAKING!WHY?! Teslaguy (talk) 18:37, 9 March 2009 (UTC)ANDRE'
- This is puzzling, since Tesla lived for years after Edison died. In February 1894, Tesla visited Mr. Bettini, phonograph experimenter, who planned to record Tesla's voice, per Wizard by Marc Seifer, page 138. Tesla in his later years was honored by a yearly luncheon where he addressed reporters, so it is not as if he had faded into obscurity. He had some odd behaviors, so perhaps microphone shyness was one of them. If conspiracy theorists are correct and he was being watched by government officials, maybe there are secret recordings. Per The craft of scientific presentations, Michael Alley, page 181 Tesla had a "high pitched, almost falsetto" voice. Cheney in Tesla master of lightning page 52 said some reported he had a soft, low voice. Some said no accent, some said a heavy accent. Other sources say he would speak with various voices while having a conversation with himself , a trait that Tesla said his father had exhibited. It seems possible that recordings might exist, if he addressed a society, or that a newsreel might have been made of him commenting on scientific developments in his later years. Edison (talk) 19:38, 9 March 2009 (UTC)
Country of Birth
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Croatia was then part of Hungary. Hungary along with Austria were the Austro-Hungarian Empire. So the country of birth is Austro-Hungarian Empire. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.46.245.104 (talk) 23:16, 11 March 2009 (UTC)
That is not true!!! Austro-Hungarian Empire did not exist before 1867 (check the Wikipedia: "May 29 - The Austro-Hungarian agreement, called Ausgleich in German or kiegyezés in Hungarian ("the Compromise"), is born through Act 12, which establishes the Austro-Hungarian Empire; on June 8 Emperor Francis Joseph is crowned King of Hungary. ), and Tesla was born before, in the state called the Habsburg Monarchy (or unofficial Austrian Empire), which consisted many countries and one of them was CROATIA, where Tesla was born. Actually his willage was part of Croatia so called Military frontier (or Vojna krajina), but that was not the country, just kind of battle arie with Turks and allways part of Croatia. --Josinj (talk) 07:02, 17 March 2009 (UTC)
- You are right about the Habsburg monarchy. However, Franz Joseph I was (from 1848) the Emperor of Austria (Österreich) and thus, Tesla was Austrian, as Croatia did not exist as an independent country at that time. Joseph Jelačić von Buži, who governed Croatia at that time, was a ban, akin to a viceroy, and not a king. --ramander 06 April 2009
—Preceding unsigned comment added by Ramander (talk • contribs) 14:16, 6 April 2009 (UTC)
== TESLA MUSEUM IN BELGRADE ,SERBIA = The Tesla Museum Belgrade,Serbia Teslas notes and effects were sent there after World War 2. Too bad theres no U.S. Museum for Tesla,too!Tesla after all did most of his "inventing":(Discovering as he liked to call it!) in the United States!Andreisme (talk) 18:21, 5 April 2009 (UTC)Andreisme (talk) 18:15, 5 April 2009 (UTC)
A note to Editor Edison.Wardencylffe(Shoreham) Long Island Tesla Museum site
A note to Editor of this page. The Tesla Society(see google) and many other Tesla Societies are appealing to the politicians of New York State and the nation(former Vice President Al Gore for one) To have the Wardenclyffe Long Island ,Site of Teslas Wireless Power Transmitter experiment declared a national Mounument. The brick building still stands desighed by the famed Stanford White. A U.S. Tesla Museum is needed!Andre(Edson)Andreisme (talk) 22:36, 7 April 2009 (UTC)
- The web is full of groups of hobbyists or Teslaphiles, but those do not generally qualify as "reliable sources" with respect to any movement to make the remaining structure at Wardenclyffe a Tesla Museum. Google Books had no hits for "Tesla museum" Wardenclyffe. At Google News, I found a 1997 New York Times article about the Seifer book on Tesla which quoted Chris Bach, "a spokesman for the national Tesla-Wardenclyffe Project" which was working to preserve the site, and which said "Friends of Science East" in Shoreham NY were seeking to buy Wardenclyffe and"turn the site into a Tesla museum and science center." It said the Wardenclyffe was then owned by "the AGFA division of Bayer Corporation." I think this is enough to mention in the article that there have been efforts to preserve the site and make it into a museum. Edison (talk) 15:25, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
- Searching Google News Archive for Tesla Wardenclyffe turned up a 2002 NY Times article which said the site was still owned by Agfa-Gevaert, that it was neglected and full of overgrown foliage. It said that the Tesla Wardenclyffe Project and Friends of Science East in Shoreham were still trying to get the site listed as an historic place on astate and national registers and to get a science center bui;lt there. It said Agfa might sell the site to a developer who would presumably knock it down (or maybe convert it to condos?). The article Wardenclyffe Tower is where most of the details about a proposed museum should be placed. Edison (talk) 15:37, 8 April 2009 (UTC)
Tesla's quotes, please add
""I'm happy that I have the chance to express my gratitude that I was and will always remain a Serb and nothing else. If there is any glory and duty to humanity that can be ascribed to my name, that honour belongs to the Serb people, from whose surroundings I came from... " Nikola Tesla, February 3rd 1892. From a Lecture in London, at The Faraday Institute —Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.93.167.142 (talk) 11:41, 10 January 2010 (UTC)