
He realizes they are always triggered by certain things, and devotes much of his thought to identifying the causes of these visions. He comes to this conclusion based on his own unusual experiences from an early age where he frequently has vivid hallucinations where he sees scenes from his own memory played out again before his eyes.

Throughout the articles, Tesla expounds on his unique theory of mind which holds that human thoughts and actions are all responses to some kind of external stimulus. Tesla is optimistic that his "World Wireless System," as he calls it, will someday be built and recognized as a revolutionary advance. He envisions a worldwide network of transmitting towers that will allow for the transmission of information around the globe as well as make possible the remote control of electrical devices from anyplace on the planet.

Tesla devotes a good portion of his work to explaining a recent project of his that involves transmitting power through the air. He describes his development of the concepts for these devices and explains the theory behind them with the use of illustrative diagrams.

"My Inventions" is an assemblage of six magazine articles Tesla is asked to provide to the periodical "Electrical Engineering." Originally published in 1919, each article focuses on a certain period of Tesla's life, beginning with his early childhood in Croatia and spanning his education in Gospic and Prague, the beginning of his career in Budapest and Paris, and his moving to New York to work for Thomas Edison before founding a successful laboratory of his own.Īimed at a readership with a particular interest in electrical engineering, Tesla's articles focus on two of his best known inventions, the induction motor and the oscillating transformer, also called the Tesla coil.

"My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla" is a brief account in Tesla's own words of his early life and education and his career as an important and prolific inventor in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
