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Nikola Tesla
continued....
Perhaps newer phenomena had not been
discovered, and were therefore unavailable to Maxwell for consideration. How
was Maxwell justified in stating his equations as "final"? In deriving the
laws of electromagnetic induction, Maxwell had imposed his own "selection
process" when deciding which electrical effects were the "basic ones". There
were innumerable electrical phenomena, which had been observed since the
eighteenth century. Maxwell had difficulty selecting what he considered to
be "the most fundamental" induction effects from the start. The selection
process was purely arbitrary. After having "decided" which induction effects
were "the most fundamental", Maxwell then reduced these selected cases and
described them mathematically. His hope was to simplify matters for
engineers who were designing new electrical machines. The results were
producing "prejudicial" responses in engineers who could not bear the
thought of any variations from the "standard". Tesla had experienced this
kind of thematic propaganda before, when he was a student. The quantitative
wave of blindness was catching up with him.
Tesla and others knew very well that there were
strange and anomalous forms of electromagnetic induction, which were
constantly, and accidentally being observed. These seemed to vary as the
experimental apparatus varied. New electrical force discoveries were a
regular feature of every Nature Magazine issue. Adamant in the confidence
that all electrical phenomena had been both observed and mathematically
described, academicians would be very slow to accept Tesla's claims.
But this academic sloth is not what bothered
Tesla. He had already found adequate compensation for his superior knowledge
in the world of industry. Tesla, now in possession of an effect, which was
not predicted by Maxwell, began to question his own knowledge. Had he become
a "mechanist", the very thing which he reviled when a student? Empirical
fact contradicted what that upon he based his whole life's work. Goethe
taught that nature leads humanity.
The choice was clear: accept the empirical
evidence and reject the conventional theory. For a time he struggled with a
way to "derive" the shock effect phenomenon by mathematically wrestling
"validity" from Maxwell's equations ... but could not. A new electrical
principle had been revealed. Tesla would take this, as he did the magnetic
vortex, and from it weave a new world.
What had historically taken place was indeed
unfortunate. Had Maxwell lived after Tesla's accidental discovery, then the
effect might have been included in the laws. Of course, we have to assume
that Maxwell would have "chosen" the phenomenon among those, which he
considered "fundamental".
There was no other
way to see his new discovery now. Empirical fact contradicted theoretical
base. Tesla was compelled to follow. The result was an epiphany, which
changed Tesla's inventive course. For the remainder of his life he would
make scientific assertions, which few could believe, and fewer yet would
reproduce. There yet exist several reproducible electrical phenomena, which
cannot be predicted by Maxwell. They continually appear whenever
adventuresome experimenters make accidental observations.
FOCUS
High voltage impulse currents produced a
hitherto unknown radiant effect. In fact, here was an electrical
"broadcast" effect whose implementation in a myriad of bizarre designs would
set Tesla apart from all other inventors. This new electrical force effect
was a preeminent discovery of great historical significance. Despite this
fact, few academicians grasped its significance as such. Focused now on
dogmatizing Maxwell's work, they could not accept Tesla's excited
announcements. Academes argued that Tesla's effect could not exist. They
insisted that Tesla revise his statements.
Tesla's mysterious effect could not have been
predicted by Maxwell because Maxwell did not incorporate it when
formulating his equations. How could he have done so, when the phenomenon
was just discovered? Tesla now pondered the academic ramifications of this
new effect. What then of his own and possibly other electrical phenomena,
which were not incorporated into Maxwell's force laws? Would academes now
ignore their existence? Would they now even dare to reject the possibility
of such phenomena on the basis of an incomplete mathematical description?

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