Teslascope
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Tesla's Hyperdimensional Oscillator or Teslascope is a tool of enlightment allegedly created by the well known Serbian scientist Nikola Tesla. He claimed that he was using it since he invented it and it helped him a lot with his scientific work[citation needed]. He stated that he used to communicate with extraterrestrial entities and to gain good vibes from the cosmos. There are hypothesis that this tool of enlightment works as a convertor of energies. It converts the free cosmic energy into positive energy for the person who carries it[citation needed].
About 40 years later, Tesla's assitant Arthur Matthews wrote a book named The Wall of Light about his experience and claimed that Tesla's "Teslascope" was secretly developed for the purpose of communicating with Mars. In an interview he stated:
- Arthur Matthews came from England. Matthews' father was a laboratory assistant to the noted physicist Lord Kelvin back in the 1890s. Tesla came over to England to meet Kelvin to convince him that alternating current was more efficient than direct current. Kelvin at that time opposed the AC movement. In 1902, the Matthews family left England and immigrated to Canada. When Matthew's was 16, his father arranged for him to apprentice under Tesla. He eventually worked for him and continued this alliance until Tesla's death in 1943.
- It is not generally known, but Tesla actually had 2 huge magnifying transmitters built in Canada. And Matthews operated one of them. Most people know about the Colorado Springs transmitters and the unfinished one on Long Island. I saw the 2 Canadian transmitters. All the evidence is there.
- The Teslascope is the thing that Tesla invented to communicate with beings on other planets. There's a diagram of the Teslascope in Matthew's book The Wall of Light. In principle, it takes in cosmic ray signals. Eventually the signals are stepped down to audio. Speak into one end, and the signal goes out the other end as a cosmic ray emitter.
Matthews' diagrams make minimal electronic sense. No one has ever confirmed the reality of the Teslascope [1].
[edit] Futher readings
- Inventor of Dreams by W. Bernard Carlson; March 2005; Scientific American Magazine;