John Ernst Worrell Keely

John Ernst Worrell Keely

John Ernst Worrell Keely (September 3 1827November 18 1898) was a US inventor from Philadelphia who invented the Keely Motor which he claimed to be capable of perpetual motionfact|cite where he said this|October 2008. Keely invented, reportedlyfact|cite where this is reported please|October 2008, an induction resonance motion motor. He is supposed to have used "etheric technology".

Biography

John Keely was orphaned in early childhood and he was raised by his grandparents. Before he entered into science, he worked as an orchestra leader, a carpenter, a carnival barker, and as a mechanic.

In 1872, Keely announced that he had discovered a principle for power production based on the musical vibrations of tuning forks. He claimed that music could resonate with atoms or with the aether. With other engineers and investors, he founded Keely Motor Company in New York and attracted investment of $10,000 that he used to build his machine. Most of this came from businessmen in New York and Philadelphiafact|this section needs historical citations|October 2008.

On November 10, 1874, Keely gave a demonstration of the motor before a small group of citizens of Philadelphia. In subsequent demonstrations he kept changing the terminology he used, to "vibratory-generator" to a "hydro-pneumatic-pulsating-vacu-engine" to "quadruple negative harmonics". His most enthusiastic supporter was a wealthy widow Clara Jessup Bloomfield-Moore. Scientists investigated his machine that appeared to run on air and water, though Keely endeavored to avoid thisfact|if making allegations then cite references as this supposes he is a charlatan without evidentiary proof of his hiding his inventions deliberately for fear of being exposed|October 2008.

Keely continued to make more research for his machine and built new models. He did all experimentation himself, never willing to let anyone else touch his machinery--especially engineers and scientistsfact|again an allegation that questions his credibility that needs citation|October 2008. To maintain interest, Keely organized regular public demonstrations. He often used musical instruments to activate his machines, a "vibratory engine" connected to a "liberator" made of brass wires, tubes, and tuning forks. He accompanied his exhibition with eloquent recitals of his theoriesfact|if his theories were recited there needs to be an overview of his theories and some reference cited|October 2008

Keely claimed that the machine could have a number of economic benefits but, when his investors demanded that he create a marketable product, he refused and said that he needed to do more experiments. When Bloomfield-Moore suggested that he could cooperate with Thomas Edison or Nikola Tesla, he again refusedfact|needs proof of her suggestion or otherwise it is hearsay and there is an outstanding assumption he was hiding his 'charlatan' methods|October 2008. For the 27 years Keely was running his company, he faced legal problems, accusations of fraud, and even occasional claim of sorcery and involvement of occultismfact|need citation of these allegations and also proof of validity as they could be spurious to deliberately discredit what may be valid but misunderstood and unknown yet legitimate science|October 2008.

In 1890, Keely pronounced that he was on the verge of a breakthrough. The "liberator" would disintegrate air and release an etheric force that could convert one quart (1 L) of water to enough power to "send a train of cars from Philadelphia to San Francisco"fact|need explanation and a quotation is used yet no reference again|October 2008.

John Keely died in November 18, 1898 when he was hit by a streetcar. After his death a close friend reported that he had once asked Keely what he wanted for an epitaph. Keely allegedly replied, "Keely, the greatest humbug of the nineteenth century."fact|verify source and also context as Keely may have meant it to be humorous and facetious owing to labels he was being given|October 2008 Keely is buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.

Research Principles

In the 19th century most physicists believed that all of space was filled with a fluid called the "luminiferous aether". Experiments were conducted to measure the properties but either resulted in confusing or negative resultsfact|need references to what experiments were done and which were "confusing or negative"|October 2008. Many physicists believed it was plausible that Keely's machines had somehow tapped into this etherfact|state 'most' and 'many' yet again no references when this seemed to be commonly held belief at the time|October 2008.

Keely stated that ether is 986,000 times denser than steel. New theories about the existence of dark matter are resurrecting the potential existence of the long-forgotten 'luminiferous aether'. [cite article|author=Zeeya Merali|date=August 25 2006|title='Ether' returns in a bid to oust dark matter|issue=Magazine issue 2566|publisher=NewScientist magazine|url=http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-08/ns-ert082306.php.]

By the early decades of the 20th century physicists finally realized that the reason they couldn't detect the ether was that it didn’t existfact|new theories are replacing dark matter with ether again http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0607411|October 2008. The reasons they had given for thinking it existed had been resolved by the theory of relativityfact|need references to support the lack of existence of 'ether' and reference to how theory of relativity explains how 'ether' does not exist|date=October 2008. Today Luminiferous aether is rarely mentioned in textbooksfact|need references to textbooks that do mention "luminiferous aether"|October 2008, but is regaining some credence as an alternative explanation to dark matter [cite journal|author= T.G Zlosnik, P.G Ferreira, and G.D Starkman|title=Modifying gravity with the Aether: an alternative to Dark Matter|date=03 Mar 2007|publisher=Physical Review D|volume=75|doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.75.044017|url=http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0607411] .

Keely also experimented on cavitation, particularly acoustic cavitation and water cavitation forces, as found in a water hammer. Cavitative forces are largely unstudied today with few modern textbooks having been written on cavitation physics [http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=9125003792513982191&ei=Z-jwSL_yOoXE-wGIlr3iDg&q=dale+pond&hl=en Lecture by Dale Pond: The Basic Principles of Sympathetic Vibratory Physics] ] .

Keely also changed his focus in 1893 from research on cavitation to research on negative attractive force, which is also known as the 'implosive force'. This is the corollary to the explosive force or expansive force, or 'male force', which is well-understood in typical modern physics. Implosive force is also called 'female' or 'negative' force that is largely unknown and unstudied.

Keely looked at actionic rays as the proof of the cosmical 'Law of Assimilation' which he believed to be the superceding governing principle of the universe. The focalizing of a force into the center and then re-radiating of the force outward happens through all spherical bodies, such as stars, suns, planets. This can also happen in the brain and cells of the human body and other living organisms. Neutral balance is reached when both the 'female', or 'dark', focusing force and the 'male', or 'light', radiating force are equalized. When neutral balance is reached, the vibration is not seen, as in sunlight from the sun moving through space, which is an apparent vacuum so should not transmit heat. The vibrations are only felt as heat and light when reflected off of objects. Other vibration frequencies given off by the sun, such as cosmic, gamma, x-rays, are not usually perceived by humans, but also exist. This information is known through Indian Vedic, Masonic, and Rosicrucian knowledge.

Keely also stated that "all force manifests as vortexes". In other words, all vibration or energy operates along three vectors: transverse, longitudinal and rotational

Keely could operate his machines with his brainwave frequencies that were tuned to certain frequencies. He stated that it worked in that "etheric currents go through the body at high levels in tune with the material world" so that sympathy is reached, like tuning in a radio, so the machine will do what you want it to do.

Keely stated in 1893, "Matter is bound up energy and energy is liberated matter." This fundamental understanding was a precursor to Einstein's theory of relativity.

Research Funding

By the mid 1870s Keely's stockholders began withdrawing support due to the delays in producing a marketable product. Keely was close to bankruptcy when Mrs. Clara Bloomfield-Moore took an interest and invested $100,000 along with a guaranteed salary of $2,500 a month (around $1.7 million and $50,000/month in today's values fact|citation needed for this section|October 2008.

Scientific American magazine was following Keely's career with great skepticism and frequent articles, eventually referring to the machines as a "heterogeneous cominglement of absurdities". In 1884 an electrical engineer named Alexander Scott, with Mrs Moore present, witnessed a demonstration that involved a weight rising and falling in a sealed flask of water. Keely used the sound from a zither to activate a "globe liberator" which then transmitted "the aetheric force" through a wire to the water container. Scott told Moore he suspected the weight was hollow, so that a change of water pressure caused by air through a hollow wire would cause it to rise or fall so Keely filed into the wire to prove it solid. As they left the workshop Mrs Moore surreptitiously picked up a piece of the wire which was found by Scott to have a very fine hollow centre.

Concerned by Scott's report and articles in newspapers and magazines debunking the machines, Moore brought physicist Professor Lascelles-Scott from England for a second opinion. After a month long investigation he stated "Keely has demonstrated to me, in a way which is absolutely unquestionable, the existence of a force hitherto unknown" and submitted his report to the Franklin Institute. Since the two experts disagreed Moore brought Lascelles-Scott and Alexander Scott to Keely's lab together to witness another demonstration. This time Mrs Moore asked Keely to cut the wire to prove it was not hollow but he flatly refused. Disappointed, she reduced Keely's salary to $250 a month.

Controversy

After Keely's death, journalists and engineers went to his laboratory to investigate his machines; Keely's supporters had already appropriated most of them, though they failed to make them workfact|need to cite how know his supporters have them and that they failed to work|October 2008. Engineer Alexander Scott and Clarence Moore, son of Clara Bloomfield-Moore and a noted archaeologist and explorer, along with a staff member of the Scientific American magazine examined the building. Inside the walls they found mechanical belts linked to a silent water motor two floors below the laboratory. In the basement there was a three-ton sphere of compressed air that ran the machines through hidden air pressure tubes and pneumatic switches. The walls, ceilings and even solid beams were found to have hidden pipework. Journalists documented everything photographically to leave no room for doubt. A model of Keely's engine is in the collection of the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.

Keely's supporters continue to claim that he was framed.

"Unfortunately the history books took the Scientific American debunking as fact and John Keely has been portrayed historically as a fraud and a conman. This is because Clarence Moore found the floor of Keeley's 'workshop' raised and saw a pressure machine that was hooked up to his machines to make them look like they actually worked. Those who have any inkling of physics who have studied what remains of his work, know these reports to be mostly erroneous." -Jerry Decker, KeelyNet.com

Keely's theories are now also incorporated in "Sympathetic Vibratory Physics", a merging of science and new age philosophy.

=References=

Notes

Books

* Theo Paijmans and John A. Keely, "Free Energy Pioneer: John Worrell Keely". Illuminet Press. July 1, 1998 ISBN 1-881532-15-1
* Dale Pond, Edgar Cayce, John Keely, Rudolf Steiner and Nikola Tesla, "The Physics of Love". The Message Company. 1996 ISBN 1-57282-002-0
* John Worrell Keely: Fotos und Baupläne seiner Erfindungen. CD-Rom mit über 50 historischen Fotos. Lohengrin-Verlag, Tellingstedt 2003. http://www.lohengrin-verlag.de

Further reading

* citation
last=Schadewald | first=Robert J.
title=Worlds of Their Own - A Brief History of Misguided Ideas: Creationism, Flat-Earthism, Energy Scams, and the Velikovsky Affair
year=2008
publisher=Xlibris
isbn=978-1-4636-0435-1

External links

* Decker, Jerry, and Chuck Henderson, " [http://www.keelynet.com/ KeelyNet] ". KeelyNet, Carrollton, Texas. Site of Keely supporters.
* Pond, Dale, " [http://www.svpvril.com/svpweb5.html#TOP%20pg%205 Sympathetic Vibratory Physics] — Historical articles on John Keely".
* Simanek, Donald E., " [http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/museum/keely/keely.htm Keely Motor Company] ". [http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/museum/unwork.htm The Museum of Unworkable Devices Main Gallery] .
* " [http://ascension2000.com/ConvergenceIII/ The Science of Oneness] "
** " [http://ascension2000.com/ConvergenceIII/c05-spherlight.htm Chapter 05: The aether as spherical light and sound] ". Former “convergence iii” outline and chapter links.
** " [http://ascension2000.com/ConvergenceIII/c308.htm Chapter eight: Keely and the physics of vibration] ". A disclosure of extraterrestrial physics and spirituality.
* Pond, Dale, " [http://www.svpvril.com/ Sympathetic Vibratory Physics ] - It's a Musical Universe". SVPvril, 2001. (GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1)
* " [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=9125003792513982191 Dale Pond on Google Video] " demonstrating the principles of a Keely motor. (3 hours in 2 parts)
* [http://www.webcemeteries.com/westlaurelhill/LHO.Asp Biography-West Laurel Hill Cemetery web site]
* Arfst Wagner: "Eine Antriebskraft, die nur moralisch sein kann". Rudolf Steiner über die Erfindungen John Worrell Keelys. http://www.lohengrin-verlag.de/keely/ueberkeely.htm
* John Worrell Keely: Über das Prinzip seiner Erfindungen. http://www.lohengrin-verlag.de/keely/keelytexte.htm


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Keely — Infobox Given Name Revised name = Keely imagesize= caption= pronunciation= gender = meaning = region = origin = related names = footnotes = Keely is a surname and given name, and may refer to:As a surname: *Conrad Keely, American rock music… …   Wikipedia

  • Keely, John E.W. — ▪ American inventor in full  John Ernst Worrell Keely   born Sept. 3, 1827 died Nov. 18, 1898, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.       fraudulent American inventor.       Keely was orphaned in early childhood. He is said to have been an orchestra leader, a …   Universalium

  • History of perpetual motion machines — The history of perpetual motion machines dates back to the Middle Ages. For millennia, it was not clear whether perpetual motion devices were possible or not, but the development of modern thermodynamics has indicated that they are impossible.… …   Wikipedia

  • 1874 — This article is about the year 1874. Millennium: 2nd millennium Centuries: 18th century – 19th century – 20th century Decades: 1840s  1850s  1860s  – 1870s –  1880s  189 …   Wikipedia

  • List of hoaxes — The following are lists of hoaxes: Proven hoaxes These are some claims that have been revealed to be deliberate public hoaxes. This list does not include hoax articles published on or around April 1, a long list of which can be found in the April …   Wikipedia

  • Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania — Coordinates: 40°00′27″N 75°14′03″W / 40.0075°N 75.23417°W / 40.0075; 75.23417 …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”