Why Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse are Famous for all the WRONG Reasons!

I use original documents to answer why and how Nikola Tesla became famous, how that story is based on misunderstandings and why George Westinghouse's personality and accomplishments have been stolen from him.
order my book "The Lightning Tamers" from Amazon:
amzn.to/3I7N4mq
To read the script (with citations that link to original documents)
www.KathyLovesPhysics.com
Patreon: www.patreon.com/user?u=15291200
AudioBook Go Fund Me: www.gofundme.com/f/donate-to-...
Some video links:
"Edison Electrocutes an Elephant" (1903)
(Note: I edited the video so you don't have to see the elephant dying, but in the actual video you can see the smoke and it is disturbing) • Thomas Edison: Electro...
"Nikola Tesla: Master of Lightning" PBS Director: Robert Uth (2000)
• Video
0:00 Comparing Edison Awards (1912 and 1916)
3:34 How it all Started (1867-1887)
7:12 Edison vs. Westinghouse (1888)
9:53 The Failed AC Motor (1888-1890)
14:22 Electric Death (1889-1890)
16:54 The Resurgence of Tesla's Polyphase (1891-1896)
26:52 Tesla Destroys His Reputation (1896-1904)
34:14 Westinghouse vs. JP Morgan (1904-1914)
38:39 Tesla's Reputation Starts to Rebound (1914-1919)
43:15 Edison's Reputation Rebounds (1903-1931)
45:36 Tesla Changes the Story (1929-1943)
50:47 The Myth is Born (1960-Today)
1:02:11 Tesla as Electrical Wizard Not Engineer

Пікірлер: 479

  • @rexsolomon6325
    @rexsolomon6325 Жыл бұрын

    Kathy is not just a historian. She is a great detective and truth teller!!!

  • @spiritinthesky572

    @spiritinthesky572

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen! Presents her story which holds your attention with timely references and great editing!! Fantastic! The friends in my circle will absolutely love you!!

  • @johnjohnson5028

    @johnjohnson5028

    Жыл бұрын

    What, then, is a historian?

  • @LordofSyn

    @LordofSyn

    10 ай бұрын

    Check Nicolai Tesla's list of Patents. Tesla's AC Patent motor is from March 1887. Check Westinghouse's List of Patents. Also know that N. Tesla worked for Westinghouse.

  • @legendre007
    @legendre007 Жыл бұрын

    I learn so much from Kathy going to the original sources to separate myth from fact. And the facts she uncovers are even more astounding than the myths. 😊

  • @machevellian79

    @machevellian79

    10 ай бұрын

    She is brilliant.

  • @alfabsc
    @alfabsc Жыл бұрын

    In 1968, I built a Tesla coil based on a plan in Popular Science magazine for my high school science fair. That same year my English teacher required us to write term paper and I chose Tesla and his inventions. I could only find one biography of Tesla in my small town library, and about three sentences in encyclopedias in my school library. Mostly the biography repeated some of the "stories" like Westinghouse begging Tesla to forgive the $ per horsepower royalty. Later in life, I realized that the source for the stories were the memories of and old man, probably embellished to make himself look good. Your observation that Tesla was an "electrical artist" is concise and to the point. He couldn't balance a checkbook. 😁 Thanks and keep talking to us.

  • @joelwexler

    @joelwexler

    Жыл бұрын

    I was the opposite of an electrical artist. Good in class, but nobody stood near me when I applied power to anything in the lab.

  • @pinkiesue849

    @pinkiesue849

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you ever heard of a savant?

  • @mnomadvfx

    @mnomadvfx

    4 ай бұрын

    @@pinkiesue849 It's entirely possible that Tesla was a high functioning autistic, they do tend to be anti social.

  • @nghermit4922
    @nghermit4922 Жыл бұрын

    Oh my word, Kathy, this was unreal. My dad and I used to have those older books from the 80’s, I have that documentary, I don’t think you could have been more kind about “debunking” a legend. 41 years old just for reference.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    I really tried my best to be kind. Tesla Coil‘s are very inspiring and a lot of wonderful people found fell down the Tesla rabbit hole. I want to both acknowledge how inspiring Tesla could be while recognizing that a lot of things are attributed to him which he did not do. I’m glad you like the video and it spoke to you.

  • @maspesasmasperras5554

    @maspesasmasperras5554

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics you're being paid by edison

  • @fdewiii

    @fdewiii

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maspesasmasperras5554 She is a truth fan

  • @johncarlisle6865

    @johncarlisle6865

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@maspesasmasperras5554lol 😂

  • @johankotze42
    @johankotze42 Жыл бұрын

    I have been waiting for this for a long time. The near canonization of Nikola Tesla just never rang true for me. Thank you, Kathy.

  • @spyral00

    @spyral00

    Жыл бұрын

    The same could be said about Elon Musk...

  • @ejtattersall156

    @ejtattersall156

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spyral00 Any wonder that both of their reputations are cracking at the same time.

  • @mnomadvfx

    @mnomadvfx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spyral00 Meh, Musk is literally just Steve Jobs for EV and Space. Nothing his companies do is reinventing the wheel and the engineering work is all done by a corps dedicated to it rather than by Musk himself who sells his reputation as a tech genius as much as his company products. Moreover without govmt EV subsidies Tesla would be a fraction of its current size, and without NASA/JPL expertise the efforts of SpaceX would not have amounted to much either.

  • @clintongick736

    @clintongick736

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spyral00 Musk is actually probably more comparable to Westinghouse in the way he conducts business, if you're looking at it objectively.

  • @jensphiliphohmann1876

    @jensphiliphohmann1876

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@clintongick736 You mean similar to how Westinghouse was depicted.

  • @clay.tennis
    @clay.tennis Жыл бұрын

    Oh my goodness, this is undoubtedly one of the most awe-inspiring presentations I have ever encountered. It's truly remarkable how you have successfully promoted accurate historical accounts by delving into the original events. These videos deserve greater recognition and widespread acknowledgement!!

  • @jeffbehary4323
    @jeffbehary4323 Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this one Kathy, especially after archiving more than 6500 original letters and documents of Tesla from Leland Anderson's archive and realising the stories we've heard over the decades were far from accurate or even made-up. No doubt this video will get criticism from Tesla fans but I really hope they would consider stepping back a moment and looking over the real documents and discussions and always demanding the proof for anything they read as opposed to accepting facts blindly. Tesla had a group of people working for him that don't tend to get a lot of credit in books, and similarly his work was perfected by the brilliant staff of Westinghouse of which he held a very high regard for (and vice-versa). He also did consulting work for Westinghouse, William A. Anthony, and others and helped them develop their motors in addition to picking their brains on various topics to improve his. He also interviewed a lot of people over the years and recommended them to Westinghouse for jobs. He did a lot we don't know about. A lot of people focus on the battles but there was far more respect and cooperation between all of these entities, Tesla was not a one-man show. My only criticism, you actually can generate nitric from high frequency discharges (or electrical discharges in general). Similar to how oxygen can get converted into ozone, nitrogen compounds are also formed by sparks. A fun fact, in the early days of X-Rays Kinraide thought that the X-Rays were not causing burns but rather the nitric generated from the corona discharges of his machines. He described soaking his arms in baking soda solutions to try and neutralise the acid to avoid them, which helped to some extent. Unfortunately the X-Rays in addition to the nitric compounds were causing burns...(the nitric acid burns, the X-Rays keratoses) in the end he burned a young woman making repeated X-Rays of her to perfect his machine and ended up marrying her out of obligation not being sure if she would survive the injuries or not. The irony of the story is that she was much younger than him, he was actually more interested in her mother who he had a relationship with since moving to the US from Canada. (They all lived in his mansion in Jamaica Plain). The younger bride recovered and became a high society girl and decades later when she wanted to separate from Kinraide went to the press and told them her husband was having an affair with her mother since their honeymoon. Needless to say the case received a lot of publicity as the "most sensation separation trial in Massachusetts history". The story gets more colourful but not for all ages... Kinraide and Tesla incidentally also knew and respected each other and Tesla used Kinraide's phosphorescent screens when he did his X-Ray and Lenard Ray research in 1897. And when Tesla filed the patent for Wardenclyffe, several claims of the tower design were thrown out by the patent office because of Kinraide's prior patents. So Tesla fans, before you get angry realise there are many stories in the lives of these inventors we don't know or that surface that change how we perceive things. And that's what makes history so much fun...

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Jeff, that is fascinating about the nitric acid! I was particularly irritated with the fertilizer thing was because in 1900 William Crookes gave this big speech where he said if we don’t figure out how to get fertilizer out of the air then western civilization will collapse so it was the big problem in chemistry at the time and the reason that we got the third law of thermodynamics as well as chemical warfare in World War I. it’s a crazy story. Anyway, because I knew that history I knew the whole let’s get nitrogen out of the air and make fertilizer was not something we could do with a spark. But I didn’t know about nitric acid. Thanks Kathy

  • @MultiPetercool

    @MultiPetercool

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics Kathy, Are you familiar with The History Guy? I think you would find his most recent posting about the Carrington event quite interesting.

  • @crazyericstewartofcanton9999

    @crazyericstewartofcanton9999

    Жыл бұрын

    I Love Learning The Truth, No Matter What It Is!!! Thank You For Your Meticulous Research As Well My Friend!!! It Really Is Fun Uncovering Tru History!!!💪💪💪❤️❤️❤️🤔🤔🤔🧠🧠🧠

  • @sonofkabisch

    @sonofkabisch

    Жыл бұрын

    They aren't really Tesla fans...most of them have no idea what he actually did. What they really are, are myth lovers and Edison iconoclasts.

  • @MultiPetercool

    @MultiPetercool

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sonofkabisch Edison’s greatest invention was the modern industrial laboratory. Bell Laboratories was very much like Edison’s research labs in Menlo Park, and East Orange. Edison assembled teams of smart people and had them all work together and the results were incredible. Since then many other companies have created such laboratories. Edison’s approach was adopted by many other companies, and resulted in things like telecommunications, satellites, lasers, and the transistor. I think the days of Edison worship are long gone, and we now live in a world that likes to demonize the man.

  • @xit1254
    @xit1254 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! This is one of the most amazing videos I've ever seen. It's wonderful that you've been able to correct the conventional "history" by going back to the original documents. I hope this becomes more well known.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks and me too 🤣

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for highlighting the terrible damage done by the isolated genius myth. It is simply not how anything is accomplished. And yet people rely on this. It prevents us not only from understanding our history but from actually getting things done.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly! Plus it really easily leads to pseudoscience.

  • @BTFranklin
    @BTFranklin Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. More people need to see this. I also had fallen for the myth, after I read "Tesla: Man Out of Time" as a teen.

  • @joelwexler

    @joelwexler

    Жыл бұрын

    It makes you wonder about all the myths we have about people. Next thing you know they'll tell us Washington could tell a lie.

  • @MinnoW12
    @MinnoW12 Жыл бұрын

    I'm blown away by the historical detail and quality storytelling! And this is the first video I have seen of yours! It must have taken forever to consume and reduce all that info.

  • @pepstein

    @pepstein

    Жыл бұрын

    You’re in for a treat as you watch all the other videos she has produced!

  • @johankotze42
    @johankotze42 Жыл бұрын

    My last employer (a mining company) used WABCO off highway trucks for some years. I found it fascinating to discover that WABCO stood for Westinghouse Air Brake Company. That was in the 1990s.

  • @susilgunaratne4267

    @susilgunaratne4267

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, Just great to know this!

  • @angelstevens2782
    @angelstevens2782 Жыл бұрын

    We'll wait just don't stop making this series. Cheers.

  • @datrucksdavea2080
    @datrucksdavea2080 Жыл бұрын

    Great point on how science builds on itself with the many collaborators and personalities. After reading the book, The Current Wars by Adam Cline, and how fascinating that whole thing was, I became a fan of Westinghouse. So I named one of my cats after him, my other cats name is Cavendish after Henry Cavendish. Thank you for the entertaining and historical science stories.

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381 Жыл бұрын

    Great program about Edison, Tesla and Westinghouse. Thanks for digging into this. I agree Westinghouse was an incredible engineer and an unusually generous industrialist of the "golden age."

  • @DavidMFChapman
    @DavidMFChapman Жыл бұрын

    I just this minute finished your book (which I asked for and received for Christmas). I’m a physicist too (MSc, UBC, 1977) and understand the basic concepts, but I really enjoyed the human aspects of the story. You really dug deep for those! I’m looking forward to your next book :)

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you ❤️ I’m looking forward to (finishing) my next book too

  • @plankton50
    @plankton50 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kathy. Your videos are always feel incredibly well researched and I always feel smarter for having watched them. You really are a genuine inspiration. Not only are you clearly a very talented historian, you do an amazing job of making it interesting, engaging and educational for regular old schmoes like me

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, and I’m pretty sure you’re not a regular old schmo or if you are so am I.

  • @plankton50

    @plankton50

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics Well in that case, from schmo to schmo, thanks for the great videos!

  • @williambaker5670
    @williambaker5670 Жыл бұрын

    This is fascinating thank you so much for all the work you put into it.

  • @timmack2415
    @timmack2415 Жыл бұрын

    Kathy, you are the best! TY for lifting the veil of myth.

  • @gaozihan4
    @gaozihan4 Жыл бұрын

    Well said, the technology is not built by isolated people, but the community.

  • @Electronzap
    @Electronzap Жыл бұрын

    For some reason, story tellers feel the need to idolize the main character while villainizing everyone else around them.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m sorry if you feel if I did that in this case. There are many people in this time Who I find utterly delightful not just Westinghouse but also Pupin, Lamme, Dolivo-Dobrovolsky, and more. However, in this video I focused on Edison, Westinghouse, Tesla, and JP Morgan.

  • @Electronzap

    @Electronzap

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics No not you, the other documentarians. Your analysis makes a lot more sense than theirs does. It always seemed impossible to me that one individual could dominate an entire industry but shady businessmen get all the financial reward.

  • @jimf2525
    @jimf2525 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! I reference it twice in the book series I’m writing, . Thank you.

  • @VanVeenTraining
    @VanVeenTraining7 ай бұрын

    Kathy, thank you so much for your videos! They’ve reinvigorated my ove of Physics by giving me a story behind the characters!

  • @drh490
    @drh490 Жыл бұрын

    George Westinghouse was a great man. I tell people Tesla is amazing but he doesn't compare to Westinghouse. Westinghouse contributed so much more to our modern world than most people even know. He seemed to be very appreciative of his fellow man. It seemed his workers loved him. That should tell you a lot. That is much more important than Tesla's contributions.

  • @nathanraymond7781
    @nathanraymond7781 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, thank you, thank you for such a well-researched video. The world needs more media like this. I have long been confused by the rise in Tesla's renown in my lifetime, with not a lot of original source material being referenced. You've done an amazing job both going back to the original source material and showing how people have collectively been confused about the what, the who, and the when.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    You're very welcome.

  • @bitchslappedme
    @bitchslappedme6 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this great video with a plethora of historical documents. I had some wrong ideas that were corrected by this video.

  • @H0mework
    @H0mework Жыл бұрын

    This and your other video are great. I subscribed!

  • @eliseleonard3477
    @eliseleonard3477 Жыл бұрын

    Wow the Lauffen-Frankfurt experiment would have been so impressive! Taking kinetic hydro energy, turning it into electricity, and turning that back into potential hydro energy! Brilliant demonstration even for non-scientists.

  • @brylozketrzyn

    @brylozketrzyn

    10 ай бұрын

    Even more impressive is the fact, that by simply increasing phase voltage they achieved transmission efficiencies you see in grid today.

  • @helmutkrahn9337
    @helmutkrahn9337 Жыл бұрын

    Respectfully calling Tesla "an electrical artist untethered to reality" is an eloquent summation that I can live with. Thank you. And I'm not surprised this video took a while to put together. (Just figuring out how to get this to Elon!)

  • @EVPaddy

    @EVPaddy

    Жыл бұрын

    Elon, the modern day Teala (in means of empty crazy promises )

  • @susilgunaratne4267

    @susilgunaratne4267

    Жыл бұрын

    @@EVPaddy " internet Tesla"

  • @borisyeltsin6606

    @borisyeltsin6606

    Жыл бұрын

    Elon notably lied about his bachelor's in physics as well as entrance into an elite PhD program. He holds a bachelor's in economics after investors arranged for it to be issued two years after he left his Undergrad and never returned to any University again.

  • @arnowisp6244

    @arnowisp6244

    Жыл бұрын

    @@EVPaddy Tell that to Space X and Star Link. Especially StarLink and Ukraine.

  • @EVPaddy

    @EVPaddy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@arnowisp6244 Tesla has also done some things - but most of his ideas were crazy nevertheless. Starlink is far from delivering what was announced, btw. But Space X has made other promises like city to city travel with Space X rockets and the like. I agree Space X isn't as bad as Tesla though - probably because it's more run by Shotwell than by Musk.

  • @SkyGizmmo
    @SkyGizmmo10 ай бұрын

    Great clarification of His Story The real players are seldom actually acknowledged. Thanx for your diligence and spirit!

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc Жыл бұрын

    Well I'm glad now to learn it wasn't something wrong with me all this time. For a long time I'd tried many times to believe what was published as ideas and inventions of Tesla (each one somehow wasn't developed). Each time I tried to go with the flow, I tried to read an article I always got part through it and instantly get a 6th sense feeling I was wasting my time. I hope I hadn't offended friends in the past too much.

  • @T-Rex-cu2lu
    @T-Rex-cu2lu Жыл бұрын

    As an electrical engineer having 60 years of experience with R.C.A., A.T.T., U.S.N., P.G.E., and L.A.D.W.P. and having read both of Charles Steinmetz’s major works, A.C. Phenomena and Transient Phenomena I believe I am qualified to comment on the subject at hand. I have observed three KZread presentations in the name of History & Physics, one on Steinmetz, with glowing accolades, and two on Tesla, with sneering contempt. Not being a creature of so-called social media, by nature I do not involve myself with it. However, because of what I am watching, I feel that I must comment on behalf of my profession. I see here what resembles a “livestock stampede,” an aimless and incongruent flurry of comments scattering the facts of the subject. Here are the facts of Polyphase: The defining condition for the number of phases in a Polyphase System is defined by the number of conductors required to support the balanced and symmetrical condition of the system, this excluding any so-called natural conductor. A corollary condition is the flow of electric power in this system must be continuous, not pulsating. Accordingly, three or more phases must exist in order to engender the Polyphase condition. The currently adopted system has three phases, A, B, and C. Neutrals are optional. The Tesla-Westinghouse System has four phases, A, C, and B, D. The domestic alternating current system, two wire, neutral optional is hence not single phase, but in reality is two phase by definition, and consequently is not Polyphase since its power is pulsating, it is not constant. “Single Phase,” is not possible in the J. Clerk Maxwell viewpoint. The advantage of Three Phase is that it uses the least amount of “copper”. The disadvantage of it is that no alternate sequence exists so accordingly any two wire load creates an imbalance hard to compensate. The advantage of Four Phase is that it is two alternating sequences in quadrature, thus lends itself to application of two wire loads. The disadvantage is that because it is made of alternating sequences, pulsation remains as a “residue,” leading to more vibration in machinery. References: “Symmetrical Components,” Wagner & Evans “Versor Algebra - Volume One,” E.P. Dollard

  • @monkeyrilla

    @monkeyrilla

    Жыл бұрын

    The lack of replies on this post says a lot ._.

  • @esausjudeannephew6317

    @esausjudeannephew6317

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @davidw.jr.jaloway7617

    @davidw.jr.jaloway7617

    Жыл бұрын

    Three phase provides a beautifully balanced power system. Single phase loads are easily provided for by just adding a neutral. This is often necessary only at the final users location or distrbution point.

  • @donaldhysa4836

    @donaldhysa4836

    Жыл бұрын

    Ummm.... what?!

  • @monkeyrilla

    @monkeyrilla

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidw.jr.jaloway7617 Its my understanding (not an electrical engineer so maybe wrong) that the extra neutral wire bypasses the transformer?

  • @gintaszukas314
    @gintaszukas314 Жыл бұрын

    Great work, i love your stories👍

  • @puschelhornchen9484
    @puschelhornchen9484 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your work!

  • @moodiblues2
    @moodiblues2 Жыл бұрын

    You have successfully changed my view on Tesla and Westinghouse. Good job!

  • @alienfpv
    @alienfpv9 ай бұрын

    As Nikola said: "I don't care that they stole my idea; I care that they don't have any of their own" That's all about saying someone else invented this and that.

  • @louisgiokas2206
    @louisgiokas2206 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I also finished reading your book recently. I found it very interesting and entertaining. Love your content and can't wait for the Hamilton video. I am reading a book on quaternions called "Quaternions for Computer Graphics: by John Vince. It is really a math and computer science text book, but the author gives a lot of the history of the subject interspersed throughout. I also await your next book. Just a comment on the war of the currents. It seems to be going the other way. A couple of years back the IEEE Spectrum magazine had an article on DC transmission of electricity. It seems that Siemens and ABB have worked out the switchgear to control this. The article speculated on the possibility of building world wide grid with DC transmission. The idea is that solar energy could be transmitted from places like Australia to, say, Southeast Asia, with little loss. It is interesting how things progress. As you rightly point out, although specific people provide critical insights at times, it takes a large number of people to put those ideas into practice.

  • @das250250
    @das250250 Жыл бұрын

    One of the most excellent vids Kathy. Well done. I also think we need to acknowledge that written reports and news articles don't make fact. We can see how influenced newspapers are today and we're back then . Secondarily , so many stories exist that we don't know about , conversations , ideas announced between engineers in rooms , relationships , friendships all influencing statements. Lastly, what seems to be relevant is you finding reports of demonstrations in Europe by the polish engineer of a full transmission ac system and poly phase generators . I believe prior to patents by Tesla ? One thing I didn't seem to understand is what convinced Westinghouse that AC was worth the initial investment and what engineers were there at that moment because clearly he must have had some brains around him on the subject.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    If you watch my video, in defense of Westinghouse, I go over how Westinghouse heard about it, and why he and possibly he alone was the one to drive the AC revolution.

  • @das250250

    @das250250

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics Considering that DC appears to have started up earlier ,do you know what specifically it was that made him commit to it early on ? We must have known transmission was more efficient or other ?

  • @PMA65537
    @PMA65537 Жыл бұрын

    In a recent PBS survey I listed your channel as one of the best.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow thank you

  • @c0ldcity
    @c0ldcity Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant episode Kathy, thank you! EDIT: Looking forward to those quaternions!

  • @martinmalloy8119
    @martinmalloy8119 Жыл бұрын

    fantastic job, Viele Grüße aus Deutschland , always a pleasure to learn from you......

  • @charlesdubats3740
    @charlesdubats37402 ай бұрын

    The most important theme here, which Kathy underscores in the last few minutes, is how the flow of many people interacting is the real story of scientific advancement. The book "The innovators" is the only other work I've come across that emphasizes the fact that the "lone genius working alone" model is very inferior to the idea that the most influential people like Gates, Jobs, and Einstein were collaborators.

  • @louisgodbout1908
    @louisgodbout1908 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this great, fact-based, and fascinating history. I’m admirative of your work and will devour your book which I just purchased yesterday. Brava!

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much.

  • @user-ud6ui7zt3r
    @user-ud6ui7zt3r3 күн бұрын

    In direct competition with the History Channel, they should make another channel called the Reality Channel, and run Kathy's videos, non-stop, both night and day.

  • @charlesmartin351
    @charlesmartin351 Жыл бұрын

    Falsehood flies, and the Truth comes limping after it - Jonathan Swift, 1710

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh I love that quote. Thank you

  • @emancoy
    @emancoy Жыл бұрын

    The PC game in the Command and Conquer red alert also added to Teslas popularity

  • @Miko_Jones
    @Miko_Jones9 ай бұрын

    Fantastic and really educational

  • @ralphmccolgan7879
    @ralphmccolgan78792 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for all this information said so captivating

  • @kantanlabs3859
    @kantanlabs3859 Жыл бұрын

    A lot of informations with strong references. Indeed the true story is much more nuanced than the confortable tales we take for granted as soon as they come from people we falsely believe reliable. Thanks for your true facts excavation work !

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you liked it.

  • @andrearisso4792
    @andrearisso4792 Жыл бұрын

    Great job!

  • @nilo9456
    @nilo9456 Жыл бұрын

    This is so illustrative of the way bias influences the "Received narrative." The story or distortion of the past we as people have been lead to believe. I have been aware that Tesla's story has been told from many view points. Thank you for a overview of Tesla and his life and times. Very thought provoking.

  • @petar.dj98
    @petar.dj98 Жыл бұрын

    Can you make a video on tesla’s most important contributions/inventions? I know he also invented the first remote controlled vehicle. Also Röntgen cogratulated Tesla on making clearer X-ray images shortly after their discovery was announced. "Dear Sir! You have surprised me tremendously with the beautiful photographs of wonderful discharges and I tell you thank you very much for that. If only I knew how you make such things! With the expression of special respect I remain yours devoted, W. C. Roentgen."

  • @paulkennett
    @paulkennett Жыл бұрын

    Amazingly good info. Thanks

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad it was helpful!

  • @solokalnesaltam3015
    @solokalnesaltam3015 Жыл бұрын

    This is a remarkable video, thank you

  • @MrCharlyAndy
    @MrCharlyAndy3 ай бұрын

    Thanks, Kathy, for this extremely well-researched video. My very large Tesla balloon was punctured when I began to read about his idea to provide free energy to all by using the earth as an electrical resonator like the secondary circuit of a Tesla coil. It was clear, and surprising, to me that he didn’t seem to know about the conservation of energy. He was rather obsessed with the phenomenon of resonance but didn’t realize that a resonant system can only store and deliver the amount of energy that is put into it.

  • @ksich8142
    @ksich814223 күн бұрын

    As a 24yr old I absolutely love these videos!!! Please keep sharing your knowledge so younger generations such as myself can be educated. What they taught us in school during history wasn’t very accurate and pretty vague imo but none the least all of these names are only familiar because it was taught it school so I guess they did something right😂

  • @warrenvanwyck2765
    @warrenvanwyck2765 Жыл бұрын

    Also in July 1964 Popular Electronics cover story for the Tesla Coil -- I got the magazine back then. I just bought a Westinghouse portable generator, so the name lives on -- made in Vietnam.

  • @harrywoods9784
    @harrywoods9784 Жыл бұрын

    Just a thought, In my mind the willingness To be wrong in the pursuit of one’s visions Is the secret sauce of any great inventor . Nikola Tesla’s vision is most important part of this narrative and legacy.🤔IMO

  • @fulton92503
    @fulton92503 Жыл бұрын

    very good Kathy

  • @PhilOutsider
    @PhilOutsider Жыл бұрын

    This is great. Thanks.

  • @djvagabund
    @djvagabund Жыл бұрын

    very intersting. i also watched a german documentary "der stromrkieg" (the ampere wars) and in this film they also telling the story with the letter and the patent. i think i have to research and check your script to see the sources. there are a lot of rumors about tesla... some people think that tesla was the greatest inventor of all time. thanks a lot for you video! greetings from vienna :-)

  • @nathanielgreer2764
    @nathanielgreer2764 Жыл бұрын

    I absolutely love your voice! You should narrate audiobooks

  • @uzioverberg8389
    @uzioverberg8389 Жыл бұрын

    Kathy your great can’t wait to see more.

  • @MultiPetercool
    @MultiPetercool Жыл бұрын

    Both Edison and Westinghouse were products of the great railway expansion in the United States. Edison worked selling newspapers and operating a telegraph attached to a railroad station. Edison was intrigued by electricity and telegraphy. Westinghouse started out, dealing with the mechanics of trains. It is no coincidence that many telegraph lines track along railway lines.

  • @alangraham4526
    @alangraham4526 Жыл бұрын

    Tesla is still a prominent engineer regardless of the distortions of the media of the day and the possible chicanery of the "money men". Unfortunately Tesla got the limelight usually via 3rd parties for "developments" that could arguably be put down to "other" engineers of the day in my opinion Mikhail Dolivo-Dobrovolsky was crucial in the advent of the 3 phase motor but the limelight was not really in Europe at the time at all hence next to no recognition. Regardless of Teslas "faults" he was definitely was one of the main driving forces of electrification process in the late 1800's that may not have happened had he not "been around".

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 Жыл бұрын

    3:51 That is a common railroad frog found on every switch or rail crossing and is much older. The device used to put derailed trains back onto rail looks completely different and is called a rerailer. The image of the patent you show in the video is a railway frog made from one piece, to which you can attach rails and it is certainly not used to help derailed trains get back on track. It is a one-piece frog, I have seen similar designs used today for streetcar applications (especially in designs where the wheels run on their flanges over frogs), but this "one-piece-frog with attached rails" is not common used by the railway. Westinghouse maybe patented a rerailer, which he called "car replacer" back in 1867 or 1868, but I could not find the document, as google patents shows his patents only from 1874 upwards and the sources mentioning the 1867/1868 "car replacer" are not trustworthy, maybe they just repeat some made up story, as there is no reference, nor an image.

  • @karlmccreight8172
    @karlmccreight8172 Жыл бұрын

    Thankyou sooo much!

  • @jefffoster3557
    @jefffoster3557 Жыл бұрын

    Love your vids Kathy and have learned soooo much! I was just curious though......why have you not done a video on Farnsworth yet?

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m sorry, I have been planning on getting to Farnsworth for years now and I keep on getting distracted. He’s still on the list, but I am easily distracted… So sorry.

  • @jefffoster3557

    @jefffoster3557

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Kathy_Loves_Physics No problem.....I can easily understand how! Lol. Got your hardbook in my Amazon cart.....looking forward to it!

  • @jamesknapp64
    @jamesknapp6411 ай бұрын

    Fascinating video

  • @PhilMoskowitz
    @PhilMoskowitz Жыл бұрын

    Tesla is more popular because he comes off as the underdog. David vs Goliath. Remember the quote from the movie, "The Man Who Shot Liberty Vance"? - "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend."

  • @petehall1900
    @petehall1900 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you kathy

  • @davidgibson8484
    @davidgibson8484 Жыл бұрын

    The main reason Westinghouse isn't a household name is J.P. Morgan.

  • @armus139
    @armus139 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this the tesla worship was driving me nuts. It feels like a breath of fresh air to get a realistic look at the actual history.

  • @IronicallyVague
    @IronicallyVague3 ай бұрын

    The thin line between insanity & Genius is a thing after all

  • @VanVeenTraining
    @VanVeenTraining7 ай бұрын

    How ironic that Westinghouse got the Edison prize. It’s like giving Bill Gates the Jobb’s -award.

  • @shaun2072
    @shaun2072 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant work as always Kathy.

  • @Raphael_NYC
    @Raphael_NYC Жыл бұрын

    Short story: Kathy is amazing. Long story: The reason viewers write so many beautiful things about you is because they are true. Thank you Ms. Kathy. You are the best. Your work is incredible. raphael nyc

  • @johnrogers1423
    @johnrogers1423 Жыл бұрын

    Eye opening.

  • @dennisfahey2379
    @dennisfahey2379 Жыл бұрын

    Just got my copy of the book - very nice Kathy! Just in time for a Thanksgiving read by the fire.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful ❤️

  • @oh_rhythm
    @oh_rhythm Жыл бұрын

    top notch what a ride!! bravo👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @centexrails
    @centexrails Жыл бұрын

    I did not scroll through all comments to see if this was mentioned. Your photo of a railroad frog shows how the frog is used in the crossing of one rail of track through another. This is used where one track branches into 2 tracks. There is also a rerailing device called a frog but it is different than the picture shown.

  • @borisromanoff4244
    @borisromanoff4244 Жыл бұрын

    Dear Professor: Merry Xmas and a good 2023. Thank you for these great classes you deliver.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you and same to you.

  • @TheMemesofDestruction
    @TheMemesofDestruction Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kathy! ^.^

  • @kingfishstacy
    @kingfishstacy Жыл бұрын

    My new favorite teacher 😁💕 Tesla has always been my hero

  • @donpeters9534
    @donpeters9534 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your clarification and rectification of history and the myths surrounding Tesla. It is a shame that main-street media cannot be as thorough in the research of their erroneous stories...

  • @BruceRobertson
    @BruceRobertson Жыл бұрын

    This video is a remarkable accomplishment. Thank you so much, Kathy. I think you're right that historians often have to push against the general public's desire to ascribe technological change to a lone genius, rather than the combined efforts of many people, some who are often apparently in conflict with each other.

  • @agastyaanishetty4268
    @agastyaanishetty4268 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Very well researched and presented. Thank you for your excellent work.

  • @y.u.208
    @y.u.208 Жыл бұрын

    Responding here, dear Kathy, as you were kind enough to forward that link on my questions. ??? Still not smarter just more confused. My interest is getting the truth, as truth can bring balance & justice, what I think our todays' world desperately needs. How can mankind get truth if witnesses are gone? I am not in engineering or any related field, I just discovered Tesla couple of years ago, liked his deep quotes of wisdom & acknowledge a lot. As I see his name misused nowadays, guiding mankind into transhumanism and abuse of Mother Nature, I seek for truth as I believe that even after death there is chance of influence by the passed aways. Current times show me that there must be still open questions as our world & cosmo is in disbalance in many ways. I take your information given, as I see forming an opinion to find out truth must involve consideration of other opinions. Hope we get the truth one day by reflection of better now & future. "I know that I don't know anything" But If I don't ask, I will never get answers. Before getting stucked into unsolveable mysteries, I rather go for mutual agreement, If we don't get truth, better leave and start from scratch. Stubborness brings not solution, too far behind the past, too hidden some facts, we need to move on, on behalf of current situation and youth. Please lords help, and enlighten for peace, justice & balance 🙏🕯️🏞️♥🏞️️🕯️🙏

  • @davidcarson4421
    @davidcarson44213 ай бұрын

    It’s about time that someone presented the facts.

  • @arunm1877
    @arunm1877 Жыл бұрын

    I admire you for your research and work. Thank for educating

  • @colinswift2656
    @colinswift2656 Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always, just ordered the book....

  • @curtvona4891
    @curtvona4891 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent presentation, Kathy!

  • @bobkitchin8346
    @bobkitchin8346 Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed your video of the business and money side of electricity. But it would be interesting to go through the thought processes of the the patent creators themselves and the physics (ie Maxwell equations) behind them. For instance Tesla's power transmission tower sounds ridiculous, but he must have had some theoretical basis, however flawed, for it.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve done a series of videos on the history of Maxwell’s equations and they have absolutely nothing to do with Tesla’s thoughts on the Tesla Coil. As far as I can tell, he thought the earth had infinite energy that you could excite by hitting it with the right frequency which isn’t how resonance works.

  • @ReevansElectro
    @ReevansElectro Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much, Kathy. I personally propagated some of the falsehoods that you mentioned. I apologize to my many students who I spread these lies about Nikola Tesla over the years.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    We all did.

  • @pinkiesue849

    @pinkiesue849

    Жыл бұрын

    Tesla had 800 patents, making him certainly a genius in my eyes. Why was his work so suppressed if he had no particular abilities? I believe you did your students a favor even mentioning his name.

  • @johncarlisle6865

    @johncarlisle6865

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@pinkiesue849I'm guessing that you're not aware that having a working model is not a requirement before a patent is issued, so those patents are worth diddly squat. you, like myself, & millions of others, have been conned by all the lies written and filmed about Tesla over the years. it's better that this video helps to debunk a lot of the mythology

  • Жыл бұрын

    Loved this video and loved the book! One thought that I just had: the war of the currents is the story of how AMERICA got electricity. It is not about how AC was developed, because you showed that basically all inventions and theories came from Europe ( the first generators, the tranformers that made AC useful for energy transmission, the three phase system by Dolivo-Dobrovolsky). I am an outsider (Brazilian) so I hope I can say this without a nationalist bias. What do you think?

  • @susilgunaratne4267
    @susilgunaratne4267 Жыл бұрын

    Our ubiquitous 3- phases - Star/ Delta AC distribution & most efficient Double Squirrel-Cage Induction motor are due to Dolivo Dobrovolsky.

  • @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    @Kathy_Loves_Physics

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely. I go into it and much more detail in my video and the history of three phase.

  • @imeprezime1285

    @imeprezime1285

    Жыл бұрын

    3 phases, star connection-Friedrich August Haselwander. 3 phase sync. machines-F.A. Haselwander. 2 and 3 phase wound induction motor- Nikola Tesla Star/Delta connections- D. Dobrovolsky Cage induction motor- D. Dobrovolsky

  • @susilgunaratne4267

    @susilgunaratne4267

    Жыл бұрын

    @@imeprezime1285 Of course, after the initial principle idea reached to the skilled engineers & technicians it was quite natural that many worked on it simultaneously without knowing each other in different countries. What we are against here is for the claims that attribute all such inventions/work to one person - Tesla. Usually the discover of the principle for the 1st time in the history can be easily identified but not the subsequent equipment, application developers. Final successful complete product developer may also get noticed but not the in between.

  • @jayernoud9334
    @jayernoud9334 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kathy. Very good work. :-)

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 Жыл бұрын

    Ever since I found out through research. That Tesla's tower was labeled as an Atmospheric Apparatus. More research found that other's were working on the same technology. This is why I've been looking for the truth. I became an Electrical Engineer because of Tesla. He helped me (the false story) find something that interested me.

  • @itsevilbert
    @itsevilbert Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic, blown away as always. Thank you.

  • @brucebuckeye
    @brucebuckeye Жыл бұрын

    Love your videos! I learn so much!