No subject to which I have ever devoted myself has called for
such concentration of mind, and strained to so dangerous a degree the finest
fibers of my brain, as the systems of which the "Magnifying Transmitter"
is the foundation. I put all the intensity and vigor of youth in the development
of the rotating field discoveries, but those early labors were of a different
character. Although strenuous in the extreme, they did not involve that
keen and exhausting discernment which had to be exercised in attacking
the many problems of the wireless.
Despite my rare physical endurance at that period, the abused nerves
finally rebelled and I suffered a complete collapse, just as the consummation
of the long and difficult task was almost in sight. Without doubt I would
have paid a greater penalty later, and very likely my career would have
been prematurely terminated, had not providence equipped me with a safety
device, which seemed to improve with advancing years and unfailingly comes
to play when my forces are at an end. So long as it operates I am safe
from danger, due to overwork, which threatens other inventors, and incidentally,
I need no vacations which are indispensable to most people. When I am all
but used up, I simply do as the darkies who "naturally fall asleep while
white folks worry."
To venture a theory out of my sphere, the body probably accumulates
little by little a definite quantity of some toxic agent and I sink into
a nearly lethargic state which lasts half an hour to the minute. Upon awakening
I have the sensation as though the events immediately preceding had occurred
very long ago, and if I attempt to continue the interrupted train of thought
I feel veritable nausea. Involuntarily, I then turn to other tasks and
am surprised at the freshness of the mind and ease with which I overcome
obstacles that had baffled me before. After weeks or months, my passion
for the temporarily abandoned invention returns and I invariably find answers
to all the vexing questions, with scarcely any effort. In this connection,
I will tell of an extraordinary experience which may be of interest to
students of psychology.
I had produced a striking phenomenon with my grounded transmitter and
was endeavoring to ascertain its true significance in relation to the currents
propagated through the earth. It seemed a hopeless undertaking, and for
more than a year I worked unremittingly, but in vain. This profound study
so entirely absorbed me, that I became forgetful of everything else, even
of my undermined health. At last, as I was at the point of breaking down,
nature applied the preservative inducing lethal sleep. Regaining my senses,
I realized with consternation that I was unable to visualize scenes from
my life except those of infancy, the very first ones that had entered my
consciousness. Curiously enough, these appeared before my vision with startling
distinctness and afforded me welcome relief. Night after night, when retiring,
I would think of them, and more and more of my previous existence was revealed.
The image of my mother was always the principal figure in the spectacle
that slowly unfolded, and a consuming desire to see her again gradually
took possession of me. This feeling grew so strong that I resolved to drop
all work and satisfy my longing, but I found it too hard to break away
from the laboratory, and several months elapsed during which I had succeeded
in reviving all the impressions of my past life, up to the spring of 1892.
In the next picture that came out of the mist of oblivion, I saw myself
at the Hotel de la Paix in Paris, just coming to from one of my peculiar
sleeping spells, which had been caused by prolonged exertion of the brain.
Imagine the pain and distress I felt, when it flashed upon my mind that
a dispatch was handed to me at that very moment, bearing the sad news that
my mother was dying. I remembered how I made the long journey home without
an hour of rest and how she passed away after weeks of agony.
It was especially remarkable that during all this period of partially
obliterated memory, I was fully alive to everything touching on the subject
of my research. I could recall the smallest detail and the least insignificant
observations in my experiments and even recite pages of text and complex
mathematical formulae.
My belief is firm in a law of compensation. The true rewards are
ever in proportion to the labor and sacrifices made. This is one of the
reasons why I feel certain that of all my inventions, the magnifying transmitter
will prove most important and valuable to future generations. I am prompted
to this prediction, not so much by thoughts of the commercial and industrial
revolution which it will surely bring about, but of the humanitarian consequences
of the many achievements it makes possible. Considerations of mere utility
weigh little in the balance against the higher benefits of civilization.
We are confronted with portentous problems which can not be solved just
by providing for our material existence, however abundantly. On the contrary,
progress in this direction is fraught with hazards and perils not less
menacing than those born from want and suffering. If we were to release
the energy of atoms or discover some other way of developing cheap and
unlimited power at any point on the globe, this accomplishment, instead
of being a blessing, might bring disaster to mankind in giving rise to
dissension and anarchy, which would ultimately result in the enthronement
of the hated regime of force. The greatest good will come from technical
improvements tending to unification and harmony, and my wireless transmitter
is preeminently such. By its means, the human voice and likeness will be
reproduced everywhere, and factories driven from thousands of miles away
by waterfalls furnishing power. Aerial machines will be propelled around
the earth without a stop and the sun's energy controlled to create lakes
and rivers for motive purposes and transformation of arid deserts into
fertile land. Its introduction for telegraphic, telephonic and similar
uses will automatically cut out the static and all other interferences
which at present, impose narrow limits to the application of the wireless.
This is a timely topic on which a few words might not be amiss.
During the past decade a number of people have arrogantly claimed
that they had succeeded in doing away with this impediment. I have carefully
examined all of the arrangements described and tested most of them long
before they were publicly disclosed, but the finding was uniformly negative.
Recent official statement from the U.S. Navy may, perhaps, have taught
some beguilable news editors how to appraise these announcements at their
real worth. As a rule, the attempts are based on theories so fallacious,
that whenever they come to my notice, I can not help thinking in a light
vein. Quite recently a new discovery was heralded, with a deafening flourish
of trumpets, but it proved another case of a mountain bringing forth a
mouse. This reminds me of an exciting incident which took place a year
ago, when I was conducting my experiments with currents of high frequency.
Steve Brodie had just jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge. The feat
has been vulgarized since by imitators, but the first report electrified
New York. I was very impressionable then and frequently spoke of the daring
printer. On a hot afternoon I felt the necessity of refreshing myself and
stepped into one of the popular thirty thousand institutions of this great
city, where a delicious twelve per cent beverage was served, which can
now be had only by making a trip to the poor and devastated countries of
Europe. The attendance was large and not over- distinguished and a matter
was discussed which gave me an admirable opening for the careless remark,
"This is what I said when I jumped off the bridge." No sooner had I uttered
these words, than I felt like the companion of Timothens in the poem of
Schiller. In an instant there was pandemonium and a dozen voices cried,
"It is Brodie!" I threw a quarter on the counter and bolted for the door,
but the crowd was at my heels with yells, "Stop, Steve!", which must have
been misunderstood, for many persons tried to hold me up as I ran frantically
for my haven of refuge. By darting around corners, I fortunately managed,
through the medium of a fire escape, to reach the laboratory, where I threw
off my coat, camouflaged myself as a hard-working blacksmith and started
the forge. But these precautions proved unnecessary, as I had eluded my
pursuers. For many years afterward, at night, when imagination turns into
specters the trifling troubles of the day, I often thought, as I tossed
on the bed, what my fate would have been, had the mob caught me and found
out that I was not Steve Brodie!
Now the engineer who lately gave an account before a technical
body of a novel remedy against static based on a "heretofore unknown law
of nature," seems to have been as reckless as myself when he contended
that these disturbances propagate up and down, while those of a transmitter
proceed along the earth. It would mean that a condenser as this globe,
with its gaseous envelope, could be charged and discharged in a manner
quite contrary to the fundamental teachings propounded in every elemental
text book of physics. Such a supposition would have been condemned as erroneous,
even in Franklin's time, for the facts bearing on this were then well known
and the identity between atmospheric electricity and that developed by
machines was fully established. Obviously, natural and artificial disturbances
propagate through the earth and the air in exactly the same way, and both
set up electromotive forces in the horizontal as well as vertical sense.
Interference can not be overcome by any such methods as were proposed.
The truth is this: In the air, the potential increases at the rate of about
fifty volts per foot of elevation, owing to which there may be a difference
of pressure amounting to twenty, or even forty thousand volts between the
upper and lower ends of the antenna. The masses of the charged atmosphere
are constantly in motion and give up electricity to the conductor, not
continuously, but rather disruptively, this producing a grinding noise
in a sensitive telephonic receiver. The higher the terminal and the greater
the space encompassed by the wires, the more pronounced is the effect,
but it must be understood that it is purely local and has little to do
with the real trouble.
In 1900, while perfecting my wireless system, one form of apparatus
compressed four antennae. These were carefully calibrated in the same frequency
and connected in multiple with the object of magnifying the action in receiving
from any direction. When I desired to ascertain the origin of the transmitted
impulse, each diagonally situated pair was put in series with a primary
coil energizing the detector circuit. In the former case, the sound was
loud in the telephone; in the latter it ceased, as expected, the two antennae
neutralizing each other, but the true statics manifested themselves in
both instances and I had to devise special preventives embodying different
principles. By employing receivers connected to two points of the ground,
as suggested by me long ago, this trouble caused by the charged air, which
is very serious in the structures as now built, is nullified and besides,
the liability of all kinds of interference is reduced to about one-half
because of the directional character of the circuit. This was perfectly
self-evident, but came as a revelation to some simple-minded wireless folks
whose experience was confined to forms of apparatus that could have been
improved with an ax, and they have been disposing of the bear's skin before
killing him. If it were true that strays performed such antics, it would
be easy to get rid of them by receiving without aerials. But, as a matter
of fact, a wire buried in the ground which, conforming to this view, should
be absolutely immune, is more susceptible to certain extraneous impulses
than one placed vertically in the air. To state it fairly, a slight progress
has been made, but not by virtue of any particular method or device. It
was achieved simply by discerning the enormous structures, which are bad
enough for transmission but wholly unsuitable for reception and adopting
a more appropriate type of receiver. As I have said before, to dispose
of this difficulty for good, a radical change must be made in the system
and the sooner this is done the better.
It would be calamitous, indeed, if at this time when the art is
in its infancy and the vast majority, not excepting even experts, have
no conception of its ultimate possibilities, a measure would be rushed
through the legislature making it a government monopoly. This was proposed
a few weeks ago by Secretary Daniels and no doubt that distinguished official
has made his appeal to the Senate and House of Representatives with sincere
conviction. But universal evidence unmistakably shows that the best results
are always obtained in healthful commercial competition. There are, however,
exceptional reasons why wireless should be given the fullest freedom of
development. In the first place, it offers prospects immeasurably greater
and more vital to betterment of human life than any other invention or
discovery in the history of man. Then again, it must be understood that
this wonderful art has been, in its entirety, evolved here and can be called
"American" with more right and propriety than the telephone, the incandescent
lamp or the aeroplane.
Enterprising press agents and stock jobbers have been so successful
in spreading misinformation, that even so excellent a periodical as the
"Scientific
American", accords the chief credit to a foreign country. The Germans,
of course, gave us the Hertz waves and the Russian, English, French and
Italian experts were quick in using them for signaling purposes. It was
an obvious application of the new agent and accomplished with the old classical
and unimproved induction coil, scarcely anything more than another kind
of heliography. The radius of transmission was very limited, the result
attained of little value, and the Hertz oscillations, as a means for conveying
intelligence, could have been advantageously replaced by sound waves, which
I advocated in 1891. Moreover, all of these attempts were made three years
after the basic principles of the wireless system, which is universally
employed today, and its potent instrumentalities had been clearly described
and developed in America.
No trace of those Hertzian appliances and methods remains today.
We have proceeded in the very opposite direction and what has been done
is the product of the brains and efforts of citizens of this country. The
fundamental patents have expired and the opportunities are open to all.
The chief argument of the secretary is based on interference. According
to his statement, reported in the "New York Herald" of July
29th, signals from a powerful station can be intercepted in every village
in the world. In view of this fact, which was demonstrated in my experiments
in 1900, it would be of little use to impose restrictions in the United
States.
As throwing light on this point, I may mention that only recently
an odd looking gentleman called on me with the object of enlisting my services
in the construction of world transmitters in some distant land. "We have
no money," he said, "but carloads of solid gold, and we will give you a
liberal amount." I told him that I wanted to see first what will be done
with my inventions in America, and this ended the interview. But I am satisfied
that some dark forces are at work, and as time goes on the maintenance
of continuous communication will be rendered more difficult. The only remedy
is a system immune against interruption. It has been perfected, it exists,
and all that is necessary is to put it in operation.
The terrible conflict is still uppermost in the minds and perhaps
the greatest importance will be attached to the magnifying transmitter
as a machine for attack and defense, more particularly in connection with
telautamatics.
This invention is a logical outcome of observations begun in my boyhood
and continued throughout my life. When the first results were published,
the "Electrical Review" stated editorially that it would
become one of the "most potent factors in the advance of civilization of
mankind." The time is not distant when this prediction will be fulfilled.
In 1898 and 1900, it was offered by me to the government and might have
been adopted, were I one of those who would go to Alexander's shepherd
when they want a favor from Alexander!
At that time I really thought that it would abolish war, because
of its unlimited destructiveness and exclusion of the personal element
of combat. But while I have not lost faith in its potentialities, my views
have changed since. War can not be avoided until the physical cause for
its recurrence is removed and this, in the last analysis, is the vast extent
of the planet on which we live. Only though annihilation of distance in
every respect, as the conveyance of intelligence, transport of passengers
and supplies and transmission of energy will conditions be brought about
some day, insuring permanency of friendly relations. What we now want most
is closer contact and better understanding between individuals and communities
all over the earth and the elimination of that fanatic devotion to exalted
ideals of national egoism and pride, which is always prone to plunge the
world into primeval barbarism and strife. No league or parliamentary act
of any kind will ever prevent such a calamity. These are only new devices
for putting the weak at the mercy of the strong.
I have expressed myself in this regard fourteen years ago, when
a combination of a few leading governments, a sort of Holy alliance, was
advocated by the late Andrew Carnegie, who may be fairly considered as
the father of this idea, having given to it more publicity and impetus
than anybody else prior to the efforts of the President. While it can not
be denied that such aspects might be of material advantage to some less
fortunate peoples, it can not attain the chief objective sought. Peace
can only come as a natural consequence of universal enlightenment and merging
of races, and we are still far from this blissful realization, because
few indeed, will admit the reality "that God made man in His image"
in which case all earth men are alike. There is in fact but one race, of
many colors. Christ is but one person, yet he is of all people, so why
do some people think themselves better than some other people?
As I view the world of today, in the light of the gigantic struggle
we have witnessed, I am filled with conviction that the interests of humanity
would be best served if the United States remained true to its traditions,
true to God whom it pretends to believe, and kept out of "entangling alliances."
Situated as it is, geographically remote from the theaters of impending
conflicts, without incentive to territorial aggrandizement, with inexhaustible
resources and immense population thoroughly imbued with the spirit of liberty
and right, this country is placed in a unique and privileged position.
It is thus able to exert, independently, its colossal strength and moral
force to the benefit of all, more judiciously and effectively, than as
a member of a league.
I have dwelt on the circumstances of my early life and told of
an affliction which compelled me to unremitting exercise of imagination
and self-observation. This mental activity, at first involuntary under
the pressure of illness and suffering, gradually became second nature and
led me finally to recognize that I was but an automaton devoid of free
will in thought and action and merely responsible to the forces of the
environment. Our bodies are of such complexity of structure, the motions
we perform are so numerous and involved and the external impressions on
our sense organs to such a degree delicate and elusive, that it is hard
for the average person to grasp this fact. Yet nothing is more convincing
to the trained investigator than the mechanistic theory of life which had
been, in a measure, understood and propounded by Descartes three hundred
years ago. In his time many important functions of our organisms were unknown
and especially with respect to the nature of light and the construction
and operation of the eye, philosophers were in the dark.
In recent years the progress of scientific research in these fields
has been such as to leave no room for a doubt in regard to this view on
which many works have been published. One of its ablest and most eloquent
exponents is, perhaps, Felix le Dantec, formerly assistant of Pasteur.
Professor Jacques Loeb has performed remarkable experiments in heliotropism,
clearly establishing the controlling power of light in lower forms of organisms
and his latest book, "Forced Movements", is revelatory. But
while men of science accept this theory simply as any other that is recognized,
to me it is a truth which I hourly demonstrate by every act and thought
of mine. The consciousness of the external impression prompting me to any
kind of exertion, "physical or mental", is ever present in my mind.
Only on very rare occasions, when I was in a state of exceptional concentration,
have I found difficulty in locating the original impulse. The by far greater
number of human beings are never aware of what is passing around and within
them and millions fall victims of disease and die prematurely just on this
account. The commonest, every-day occurrences appear to them mysterious
and inexplicable. One may feel a sudden wave of sadness and rack his brain
for an explanation, when he might have noticed that it was caused by a
cloud cutting off the rays of the sun. He may see the image of a friend
dear to him under conditions which he construes as very peculiar, when
only shortly before he has passed him in the street or seen his photograph
somewhere. When he loses a collar button, he fusses and swears for an hour,
being unable to visualize his previous actions and locate the object directly.
Deficient observation is merely a form of ignorance and responsible for
the many morbid notions and foolish ideas prevailing. There is not more
than one out of every ten persons who does not believe in telepathy and
other psychic manifestations, spiritualism and communion with the dead,
and who would refuse to listen to willing or unwilling deceivers?
Just to illustrate how deeply rooted this tendency has become
even among the clear-headed American population, I may mention a comical
incident. Shortly before the war, when the exhibition of my turbines in
this city elicited widespread comment in the technical papers, I anticipated
that there would be a scramble among manufacturers to get hold of the invention
and I had particular designs on that man from Detroit who has an uncanny
faculty for accumulating millions. So confident was I, that he would turn
up some day, that I declared this as certain to my secretary and assistants.
Sure enough, one fine morning a body of engineers from the Ford Motor Company
presented themselves with the request of discussing with me an important
project. "Didn't I tell you?," I remarked triumphantly to my employees,
and one of them said, "You are amazing, Mr. Tesla. Everything comes out
exactly as you predict."
As soon as these hard-headed men were seated, I of course, immediately
began to extol the wonderful features of my turbine, when the spokesman
interrupted me and said, "We know all about this, but we are on a special
errand. We have formed a psychological society for the investigation of
psychic phenomena and we want you to join us in this undertaking." I suppose
these engineers never knew how near they came to being fired out of my
office.
Ever since I was told by some of the greatest men of the time,
leaders in science whose names are immortal, that I am possessed of an
unusual mind, I bent all my thinking faculties on the solution of great
problems regardless of sacrifice. For many years I endeavored to solve
the enigma of death, and watched eagerly for every kind of spiritual indication.
But only once in the course of my existence have I had an experience which
momentarily impressed me as supernatural. It was at the time of my mother's
death.
I had become completely exhausted by pain and long vigilance,
and one night was carried to a building about two blocks from our home.
As I lay helpless there, I thought that if my mother died while I was away
from her bedside, she would surely give me a sign. Two or three months
before, I was in London in company with my late friend, Sir William Crookes,
when spiritualism was discussed and I was under the full sway of these
thoughts. I might not have paid attention to other men, but was susceptible
to his arguments as it was his epochal work on radiant matter, which I
had read as a student, that made me embrace the electrical career. I reflected
that the conditions for a look into the beyond were most favorable, for
my mother was a woman of genius and particularly excelling in the powers
of intuition. During the whole night every fiber in my brain was strained
in expectancy, but nothing happened until early in the morning, when I
fell in a sleep, or perhaps a swoon, and saw a cloud carrying angelic figures
of marvelous beauty, one of whom gazed upon me lovingly and gradually assumed
the features of my mother. The appearance slowly floated across the room
and vanished, and I was awakened by an indescribably sweet song of many
voices. In that instant a certitude, which no words can express, came upon
me that my mother had just died. And that was true. I was unable to understand
the tremendous weight of the painful knowledge I received in advance, and
wrote a letter to Sir William Crookes while still under the domination
of these impressions and in poor bodily health. When I recovered, I sought
for a long time the external cause of this strange manifestation and, to
my great relief, I succeeded after many months of fruitless effort.
I had seen the painting of a celebrated artist, representing allegorically
one of the seasons in the form of a cloud with a group of angels which
seemed to actually float in the air, and this had struck me forcefully.
It was exactly the same that appeared in my dream, with the exception of
my mother's likeness. The music came from the choir in the church nearby
at the early mass of Easter morning, explaining everything satisfactorily
in conformity with scientific facts.
This occurred long ago, and I have never had the faintest reason
since to change my views on psychical and spiritual phenomena, for which
there is no foundation. The belief in these is the natural outgrowth of
intellectual development. Religious dogmas are no longer accepted in their
orthodox meaning, but every individual clings to faith in a supreme power
of some kind.
We all must have an ideal to govern our conduct and insure contentment,
but it is immaterial whether it be one of creed, art, science, or anything
else, so long as it fulfills the function of a dematerializing force. It
is essential to the peaceful existence of humanity as a whole that one
common conception should prevail. While I have failed to obtain any evidence
in support of the contentions of psychologists and spiritualists, I have
proved to my complete satisfaction the automatism of life, not only through
continuous observations of individual actions, but even more conclusively
through certain generalizations. these amount to a discovery which I consider
of the greatest moment to human society, and on which I shall briefly dwell.
I got the first inkling of this astonishing truth when I was still
a very young man, but for many years I interpreted what I noted simply
as coincidences. Namely, whenever either myself or a person to whom I was
attached, or a cause to which I was devoted, was hurt by others in a particular
way, which might be best popularly characterized as the most unfair imaginable,
I experienced a singular and undefinable pain which, for the want of a
better term, I have qualified as "cosmic" and shortly thereafter, and invariably,
those who had inflicted it came to grief. After many such cases I confided
this to a number of friends, who had the opportunity to convince themselves
of the theory of which I have gradually formulated and which may be stated
in the following few words: Our bodies are of similar construction and
exposed to the same external forces. This results in likeness of response
and concordance of the general activities on which all our social and other
rules and laws are based. We are automata entirely controlled by the forces
of the medium, being tossed about like corks on the surface of the water,
but mistaking the resultant of the impulses from the outside for the free
will. The movements and other actions we perform are always life preservative
and though seemingly quite independent from one another, we are connected
by invisible links. So long as the organism is in perfect order, it responds
accurately to the agents that prompt it, but the moment that there is some
derangement in any individual, his self-preservative power is impaired.
Everybody understands, of course, that if one becomes deaf, has
his eyes weakened, or his limbs injured, the chances for his continued
existence are lessened. But this is also true, and perhaps more so, of
certain defects in the brain which drive the automaton, more or less, of
that vital quality and cause it to rush into destruction. A very sensitive
and observant being, with his highly developed mechanism all intact, and
acting with precision in obedience to the changing conditions of the environment,
is endowed with a transcending mechanical sense, enabling him to evade
perils too subtle to be directly perceived. When he comes in contact with
others whose controlling organs are radically faulty, that sense asserts
itself and he feels the "cosmic" pain.
The truth of this has been borne out in hundreds of instances
and I am inviting other students of nature to devote attention to this
subject, believing that through combined systematic effort, results of
incalculable value to the world will be attained. The idea of constructing
an automaton, to bear out my theory, presented itself to me early, but
I did not begin active work until 1895, when I started my wireless investigations.
During the succeeding two or three years, a number of automatic mechanisms,
to be actuated from a distance, were constructed by me and exhibited to
visitors in my laboratory.
In 1896, however, I designed a complete machine capable of a multitude
of operations, but the consummation of my labors was delayed until late
in 1897.
This machine was illustrated and described in my article in the
"Century
Magazine" of June, 1900; and other periodicals of that time and
when first shown in the beginning of 1898, it created a sensation such
as no other invention of mine has ever produced. In November, 1898, a basic
patent on the novel art was granted to me, but only after the examiner-in-chief
had come to New York and witnessed the performance, for what I claimed
seemed unbelievable. I remember that when later I called on an official
in Washington, with a view of offering the invention to the Government,
he burst out in laughter upon my telling him what I had accomplished. Nobody
thought then that there was the faintest prospect of perfecting such a
device. It is unfortunate that in this patent, following the advice of
my attorneys, I indicated the control as being affected through the medium
of a single circuit and a well-known form of detector, for the reason that
I had not yet secured protection on my methods and apparatus for individualization.
As a matter of fact, my boats were controlled through the joint action
of several circuits and interference of every kind was excluded.
Most generally, I employed receiving circuits in the form of loops,
including condensers, because the discharges of my high-tension transmitter
ionized the air in the (laboratory) so that even a very small aerial would
draw electricity from the surrounding atmosphere for hours.
Just to give an idea, I found, for instance, that a bulb twelve
inches in diameter, highly exhausted, and with one single terminal to which
a short wire was attached, would deliver well on to one thousand successive
flashes before all charge of the air in the laboratory was neutralized.
The loop form of receiver was not sensitive to such a disturbance and it
is curious to note that it is becoming popular at this late date. In reality,
it collects much less energy than the aerials or a long grounded wire,
but it so happens that it does away with a number of defects inherent to
the present wireless devices.
In demonstrating my invention before audiences, the visitors were
requested to ask questions, however involved, and the automaton would answer
them by signs. This was considered magic at the time, but was extremely
simple, for it was myself who gave the replies by means of the device.
At the same period, another larger telautomatic boat was constructed,
a photograph of which was shown in the October 1919 number of the "Electrical
Experimenter". It was controlled by loops, having several turns
placed in the hull, which was made entirely water- tight and capable of
submergence. The apparatus was similar to that used in the first with the
exception of certain special features I introduced as, for example, incandescent
lamps which afforded a visible evidence of the proper functioning of the
machine. These automata, controlled within the range of vision of the operator,
were, however, the first and rather crude steps in the evolution of the
art of Telautomatics as I had conceived it.
The next logical improvement was its application to automatic
mechanisms beyond the limits of vision and at great distances from the
center of control, and I have ever since advocated their employment as
instruments of warfare in preference to guns. The importance of this now
seems to be recognized, if I am to judge from casual announcements through
the press, of achievements which are said to be extraordinary but contain
no merit of novelty, whatever. In an imperfect manner it is practicable,
with the existing wireless plants, to launch an aeroplane, have it follow
a certain approximate course, and perform some operation at a distance
of many hundreds of miles. A machine of this kind can also be mechanically
controlled in several ways and I have no doubt that it may prove of some
usefulness in war. But there are to my best knowledge, no instrumentalities
in existence today with which such an object could be accomplished in a
precise manner. I have devoted years of study to this matter and have evolved
means, making such and greater wonders easily realizable.
As stated on a previous occasion, when I was a student at college I
conceived a flying machine quite unlike the present ones. The underlying
principle was sound, but could not be carried into practice for want of
a prime-mover of sufficiently great activity. In recent years, I have successfully
solved this problem and am now planning aerial machines "devoid of sustaining
planes, ailerons, propellers, and other external" attachments, which
will be capable of immense speeds and are very likely to furnish powerful
arguments for peace in the near future. Such a machine, sustained and propelled
"entirely
by reaction", is shown on one of the pages of my lectures, and is supposed
to be controlled either mechanically, or by wireless energy. By installing
proper plants, it will be practicable to "project a missile of this
kind into the air and drop it" almost on the very spot designated,
which may be thousands of miles away.
But we are not going to stop at this. Telautomats will be ultimately
produced, capable of acting as if possessed of their own intelligence,
and their advent will create a revolution. As early as 1898, I proposed
to representatives of a large manufacturing concern the construction and
public exhibition of an automobile carriage which, left to itself, would
perform a great variety of operations involving something akin to judgment.
But my proposal was deemed chimerical at the time and nothing came of it.
At present, many of the ablest minds are trying to devise expedients
for preventing a repetition of the awful conflict which is only theoretically
ended and the duration and main issues of which I have correctly predicted
in an article printed in the "Sun" of December 20, 1914.
The proposed League is not a remedy but, on the contrary, in the opinion
of a number of competent men, may bring about results just the opposite.
It is particularly regrettable that a punitive policy was adopted in
framing the terms of peace, because a few years hence, it will be possible
for nations to fight without armies, ships or guns, by weapons far more
terrible, to the destructive action and range of which there is virtually
no limit. Any city, at a distance, whatsoever, from the enemy, can be destroyed
by him and no power on earth can stop him from doing so. If we want to
avert an impending calamity and a state of things which may transform the
globe into an inferno, we should push the development of flying machines
and wireless transmission of energy without an instant's delay and with
all the power and resources of the nation.