blog




  • Essay / Nikola Tesla and his inventions - 1320

    The Earth is not a piece of quartz - it is like a stone with many imperfections and scratches, and although it retains its scratches, it attempts to heal them ; he heals his wounds. However, to heal a wound, one must first isolate it: and in the case of the world, it is a literal flaw that resides beneath the mask of a wound – fought, though not neutralized, by the innovators of the Earth. A telephone, a refrigerator, a microwave, civil rights and gender equality - not only technology, but even a concept as imperative as liberation or equality have changed the globe (as seen humans), for the better: technology has made life easier for humans, ideal rights and equality have been granted to those who need them, and efforts have been made to protect the natural amenities that are held for granted. The reason given by innovators, determined to create the circumstances mentioned above, is rather simple: they strive to do what they do because of the profit that accrues not only to them, but also to the world. When Alexander Graham Bell and Antonio Meucci developed the telephone, they distributed communication among the masses (a profit) and thus improved the world; this same reason is reflected throughout the ages: Percy Spencer, inventor of the microwave, gained benefits through his invention not only for himself, but also for the Earth. So the innovators of the world retain this reason: they change things for the better because of the positive benefit that would be due to them – the positive benefit not only to themselves, but to the world. Nikola Tesla, one of these innovators, probably understood this reason more than anyone. "Born on July 9, 1856 in Smijan, Croatia, Tesla was the child of a clergy...... middle of paper ......ts asked of them). So, these are the interactions of Tesla with the issue of human incapacity that led to the production of the world's oil and proved to be an emissary of positive change - almost unparalleled From the Civil War to World War I and back. Vietnam War and the violent tendencies of humanity have often resulted in the loss of a considerable number of lives; the Civil War claimed approximately 620,000 lives, World War I with at least two million, and the Vietnam War. with a rough and ignoble figure of 3.1 million The war had - and still has - an effect on all those who witness its reign of terror Works Cited www.viewzone.com “The Future of Art. wireless", Wireless telegraphy and telephony, 1908, p. 67-71, Nikola Tesla www.brainyquote.com My inventions, Nikola Tesla, p.2 www.teslauniverse.com World of Invention, Gale, p.1www.pbs .org