http://www.aspden.org/arp/2005arp5.pdf
In his 1891 A.I.E.E. lecture at Columbia College, Tesla said in pertinent part (emphasis mine): "What is electricity, and what is magnetism? "...We are now confident that electric and magnetic phenomena are attributable to the ether, and we are perhaps justified in saying that the effects of static electricity are effects of ether in motion". "...we may speak of electricity or of an electric condition, state or effect". "...we must distinguish two such effects, opposite in character neutralizing each other". "...for in a medium of the properties of the ether, we cannot possibly exert a strain, or produce a displacement or motion of any kind, without causing in the surrounding medium an equivalent and opposite effect." "...its condition determines the positive and negative character." "We know that it acts like an incompressible fluid;" "...the electro-magnetic theory of light and all facts observed teach us that electric and ether phenomena are identical." "The puzzling behavior of the ether as a solid to waves of light and heat, and as a fluid to the motion of bodies through it, is certainly explained in the most natural and satisfactory manner by assuming it to be in motion, as Sir William Thomson has suggested." "Nor can anyone prove that there are transverse ether waves emitted from an alternate current machine; to such slow disturbances, the ether, if at rest, may behave as a true fluid."
‘Tesla maintained his belief in the aether as the source of all substance.
This, he thought, was the fundamental, unifying theory of physical things.
He was quite unable to accept Einstein’s theory of relativity and curved
space.’
‘The Secret of the Creative Vacuum’ by John Davidson [1]
‘
There is incontrovertible evidence, for example, from a number of sources,
that neither the gravitational ‘constant’ nor the speed of light in a vacuum
are constant after all. Since Einstein’s theory of relativity is founded upon
these two assumptions, if either one of them is shown to be incorrect, then
Einstein’s theory is seen to be more relative than he thought! In short, like
Newton’s observations, it would be wrong, as a fundamental model.’
‘The Secret of the Creative Vacuum’ by John Davidson [2]
‘It may come as a shock, but Einstein’s theory of relativity is not part of the
design of nuclear weapons! ...... High school science students are
conditioned to ridicule the concept of a nineteenth-century luminiferous
aether with eye-rolling and giggling. But is this a contemptible idea whencompared with the “new and improved” terminology of gravitational
masses “warping” the fabric of “space-time”?
‘A Dissident View of Relativity Theory’ by W.H.Cantrell [3]
‘Einstein plagiarized the work of several notable scientists in his 1905
papers on special relativity and E = Mc2, yet the physics community has
never bothered to set the record straight in the past century.’
‘Albert Einstein: Plagiarist of the Century’ by Richard Moody, Jr. [4]
‘Insofar as the theory is thought to explain the result of the Michelson
Morley experiment, I am inclined to agree with Soddy that it is a swindle;
and I do not think Rutherford would have regarded it as a joke had he
realized how it would retard the rational development of science’.
‘Relativity - Joke or Swindle?’ by L. Essen [5]
In his 1891 A.I.E.E. lecture at Columbia College, Tesla said in pertinent part (emphasis mine): "What is electricity, and what is magnetism? "...We are now confident that electric and magnetic phenomena are attributable to the ether, and we are perhaps justified in saying that the effects of static electricity are effects of ether in motion". "...we may speak of electricity or of an electric condition, state or effect". "...we must distinguish two such effects, opposite in character neutralizing each other". "...for in a medium of the properties of the ether, we cannot possibly exert a strain, or produce a displacement or motion of any kind, without causing in the surrounding medium an equivalent and opposite effect." "...its condition determines the positive and negative character." "We know that it acts like an incompressible fluid;" "...the electro-magnetic theory of light and all facts observed teach us that electric and ether phenomena are identical." "The puzzling behavior of the ether as a solid to waves of light and heat, and as a fluid to the motion of bodies through it, is certainly explained in the most natural and satisfactory manner by assuming it to be in motion, as Sir William Thomson has suggested." "Nor can anyone prove that there are transverse ether waves emitted from an alternate current machine; to such slow disturbances, the ether, if at rest, may behave as a true fluid."
‘Tesla maintained his belief in the aether as the source of all substance.
This, he thought, was the fundamental, unifying theory of physical things.
He was quite unable to accept Einstein’s theory of relativity and curved
space.’
‘The Secret of the Creative Vacuum’ by John Davidson [1]
‘
There is incontrovertible evidence, for example, from a number of sources,
that neither the gravitational ‘constant’ nor the speed of light in a vacuum
are constant after all. Since Einstein’s theory of relativity is founded upon
these two assumptions, if either one of them is shown to be incorrect, then
Einstein’s theory is seen to be more relative than he thought! In short, like
Newton’s observations, it would be wrong, as a fundamental model.’
‘The Secret of the Creative Vacuum’ by John Davidson [2]
‘It may come as a shock, but Einstein’s theory of relativity is not part of the
design of nuclear weapons! ...... High school science students are
conditioned to ridicule the concept of a nineteenth-century luminiferous
aether with eye-rolling and giggling. But is this a contemptible idea whencompared with the “new and improved” terminology of gravitational
masses “warping” the fabric of “space-time”?
‘A Dissident View of Relativity Theory’ by W.H.Cantrell [3]
‘Einstein plagiarized the work of several notable scientists in his 1905
papers on special relativity and E = Mc2, yet the physics community has
never bothered to set the record straight in the past century.’
‘Albert Einstein: Plagiarist of the Century’ by Richard Moody, Jr. [4]
‘Insofar as the theory is thought to explain the result of the Michelson
Morley experiment, I am inclined to agree with Soddy that it is a swindle;
and I do not think Rutherford would have regarded it as a joke had he
realized how it would retard the rational development of science’.
‘Relativity - Joke or Swindle?’ by L. Essen [5]