Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla—Biography of a Genius
Marc J. SeiferRobert H. March,
Citation: 50, 9, 65 (1997); doi: 10.1063/1.881937
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.881937
View Table of Contents: http://physicstoday.scitation.org/toc/pto/50/9
Published by the American Institute of Physics
                                                                           BOOKS
                                     Tesla—a Flamboyant Visionary
                                    and an Under-Appreciated Genius
                                               less visionary who carried most of his     the human race from the burden of
    Wizard: The Life and                       inventions to the proof-of-concept stage   manual toil! Feminists may note his
    Times of Nikola                            and a patent, but he showed little         conviction that, once sheer muscle
                                               interest in the final polishing into a     power was thus depreciated, the natu-
    Tesla—Biography                            marketable product. A promising fluo-
                                               rescent light lay neglected while Tesla
                                                                                          ral superiority of women would assert
                                                                                          itself. He was convinced that power
    of a Genius                                spent John J. Astor's investment in it     transmitted at the extremely low fre-
                                               on more speculative projects.              quencies of global resonance would
    •   Marc J. Seifer
        Birch Lane Press, Secaucus, N.J.,
        1996. 542 pp. $32.00 he
                                                   Had Tesla teamed with a competent
                                               partner, less impatient than he, he
                                                                                          traverse the planet unattenuated until
                                                                                          snatched from the sky by a suitable
                                                                                          receiver. He would pursue this un-
        ISBN 1-55972-329-7                     might have been fabulously productive.
                                               But by predisposition, Tesla was a         workable vision to the end of his long
    Reviewed by Robert H. March                loner. He remained a lifelong celibate,    life, in 1943, emerging from isolation
    Though the name Nikola Tesla is though hardly an ascetic. A stranger                  from time to time to regale the press
    hardly obscure, his role in the early to frugality, Tesla spent money as fast         with boasts of even more fantastic in-
    development of the electrical industry as it came in (or faster) on high living:      ventions such as "death rays."
    is not widely appreciated. Nonethe- a suite at the Waldorf-Astoria, dinners               Tesla was born in 1856 to a Serbian
    less, there exists a small but ferociously at Delmonico's, suits from the finest      family living in Croatia and was edu-
    loyal Tesla "cult" that sees him as a tailors. He enjoyed the company and             cated at the Polytechnic in Graz, Aus-
    neglected genius whose scientific vi- the respect of New York's financial and         tria. His understanding of the science
    sion was centuries ahead of its time cultural elites.                                 underlying his work was superior to
    and whose inventions were either pur-          Tesla's decline began in 1901, when    that of Edison or even Marconi, but
    loined or suppressed by jealous rivals he induced J. P. Morgan to invest in a         clearly inferior to that of Charles Stein-
    and greedy tycoons.                        wireless transmitter designed to reach     metz or of fellow Serb immigrant Mi-
         Tesla's most remarkable achieve- ships at sea and possibly span the              chael Pupin. For example, Tesla be-
    ment was to conceive the polyphase ac Atlantic. But stung by Guglielmo Mar-           lieved that his transmitters generated
    induction motor, as well as modern coni's transatlantic success, Tesla de-            non-Hertzian longitudinal aether
    power generation and the long-dis- cided that mere wireless telegraphy                waves that moved faster than light.
     tance transmission system that goes was beneath him. He would build a                    Though biographer Marc Seifer ac-
     with it. This was back in the 1880s, transmitter with worldwide reach,               cepts the notion that character flaws
     when the electrical industry was con- with hints that it would be upgradable         contributed to Tesla's downfall, he does
      fined to dc lighting systems with a to a system that would provide cheap            support much of the Tesla cult myth,
      service reach of no more than a few wireless electric power to the nation           taking some of Tesla's scientific mis-
     hundred meters.                            and possibly the entire globe. The        conceptions at face value. He attrib-
         Thomas Edison recognized Tesla's initial stake quickly ran out, and Mor-         utes to Tesla the invention of the laser,
     talent and brought him to work in his gan refused to sign on to this more            and he hints darkly that Morgan sup-
     US laboratory in 1884, but they soon ambitious scheme. Since Tesla had               pressed wireless power transmission
     parted company over Edison's dogged impetuously assigned Morgan a major-             to preserve the profits of his utility
     commitment to dc. Tesla's moment of ity interest in the underlying patents,          companies. If one discounts these se-
     triumph came in 1894, when the Niagara it proved impossible to attract new           rious demerits, this is a well-re-
     Falls power plant opened service to Buf- investors, and the transmission tower       searched (but not always well-written)
     falo, New York, with a system based he had built on New York's Long Island           biography that gives an interesting
I    largely on his patents, which he had was ultimately scrapped to cover                glimpse of the interactions of inven-
     unwisely sold to the Westinghouse Corp. Tesla's unpaid hotel bills.                  tors, financiers and the public in Amer-
         Fame followed swiftly. Tall, dark         Indeed, through most of the devel-     ica's Gilded Age.
     and gaunt, with a regal carriage and opment of wireless, Tesla designed
     a penetrating gaze, Tesla fully fit the far more powerful transmitters and
     popular image of a genius. His flair selective receivers than did Marconi,
    for showmanship gave rise to spectacu- but he lacked the latter's determina-          Macmillan
    lar public demonstrations, most of tion to build and demonstrate a mod-
    them based on his celebrated induction est system step-by-step to the point           Encyclopedia of Physics
    coil. These deeply impressed the of becoming a commercial success.                       Edited by John S. Rigden
    press, the public and a string of inves- Tesla rejected an offer of partnership       • Simon & Schuster Macmillan,
    tors, most of whom would know bitter by Lee DeForest, a combination that                 New York, 1996. 1881 pp.
    disappointment. For Tesla was a rest- could well have dominated the devel-               $400.00 he ISBN 0-02-897359-3
                                                opment of radio.                          It is a brave venture to compile an
    ROBERT MARCH is a professor of physics         Tesla envisaged himself as nothing     encyclopedia of physics from scratch;
    and chairman of the integrated liberal      less than a savior of mankind. Only       John Rigden and his five coeditors—
    studies program at the University of        he could bring cheap electric power to    Jim McGuire, Helen Quinn, David
     Wisconsin—Madison.                         the remotest farm and hamlet, freeing     Schramm, Roger Stuewer and Carl To-
        1997 American Institute of FhysFcs, S-OCTM-TZZO-VTOT-ZW- ?                    SEPTEMBER 1997       PHYSICS TODAY         65
                                                                     \ _