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The electric rise and fall of Nikola Tesla

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    As a magician, I'm always interested in performances that incorporate elements of illusion.
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    And one of the most remarkable was the tanagra theater, which was popular in the
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    early part of the 20th century.
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    It used mirrors
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    to create the illusion of tiny people
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    performing on a miniature stage. Now, I won't use mirrors,
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    but this is my digital tribute to the tanagra theater.
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    So let the story begin.
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    On a dark and stormy night -- really! --
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    it was the 10th of July, 1856.
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    Lightning lit the sky,
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    and a baby was born.
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    His name was Nikola,
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    Nikola Tesla.
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    Now the baby grew into a very smart guy.
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    Let me show you.
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    Tesla, what is 236 multiplied by 501?
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    Nikola Tesla: The result is 118,236.
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    Marco Tempest: Now Tesla's brain worked in the most extraordinary way.
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    When a word was mentioned,
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    an image of it
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    instantly appeared in his mind.
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    Tree. Chair. Girl.
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    They were hallucinations, which vanished
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    the moment he touched them.
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    Probably a form of synesthesia.
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    But it was something
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    he later turned to his advantage.
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    Where other scientists would play in their laboratory,
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    Tesla created his inventions in his mind.
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    NT: To my delight, I discovered I could visualize my inventions with the greatest facility.
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    MT: And when they worked in the vivid playground of his imagination,
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    he would build them in his workshop.
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    NT: I needed no models, drawings or experiments.
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    I could picture them as real in my mind,
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    and there I run it, test it and improve it.
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    Only then do I construct it.
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    MT: His great idea
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    was alternating current.
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    But how could he convince the public that
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    the millions of volts required to make it work were safe?
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    To sell his idea,
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    he became a showman.
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    NT: We are at the dawn of a new age,
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    the age of electricity.
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    I have been able, through careful invention, to
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    transmit, with the mere flick of a switch,
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    electricity across the ether.
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    It is the magic of science.
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    (Applause)
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    Tesla has over 700 patents to his name:
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    radio, wireless telegraphy,
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    remote control, robotics.
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    He even photographed the bones of the human body.
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    But the high point was the realization of a childhood dream:
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    harnessing the raging powers of Niagara Falls,
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    and bringing light to the city.
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    But Tesla's success didn't last.
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    NT: I had bigger ideas.
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    Illuminating the city was only the beginning.
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    A world telegraphy center -- imagine news,
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    messages, sounds, images delivered to
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    any point in the world
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    instantly and wirelessly.
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    MT: It's a great idea; it was a huge project. Expensive, too.
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    NT: They wouldn't give me the money.
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    MT: Well, maybe you shouldn't have told them it could be used to contact other planets.
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    NT: Yes, that was a big mistake.
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    MT: Tesla's career as an inventor never recovered.
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    He became a recluse.
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    Dodged by death,
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    he spent much of his time
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    in his suite at the Waldorf-Astoria.
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    NT: Everything I did, I did for mankind,
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    for a world where there would be no humiliation of the poor by the violence of the rich,
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    where products of intellect, science and art
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    will serve society for the betterment and beautification of life.
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    MT: Nikola Tesla died on the 7th of
    January, 1943.
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    His final resting place
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    is a golden globe that contains his ashes
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    at the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade.
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    His legacy is with us still.
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    Tesla became the man who lit the world,
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    but this was only the beginning.
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    Tesla's insight was profound.
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    NT: Tell me, what will man do when the forests disappear,
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    and the coal deposits are exhausted?
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    MT: Tesla thought he had the answer.
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    We are still asking the question.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The electric rise and fall of Nikola Tesla
Speaker:
Marco Tempest
Description:

Combining projection mapping and a pop-up book, Marco Tempest tells the visually arresting story of Nikola Tesla -- called “the greatest geek who ever lived” -- from his triumphant invention of alternating current to his penniless last days.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:05

English subtitles

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