
Transcribers' Note
PREFACE.
INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
CHAPTER I DEVICES BY MEANS OF WHEELS AND WEIGHTS - Wilars de Honecort
CHAPTER II DEVICES BY MEANS OF ROLLING WEIGHTS AND INCLINED PLANES - Device by Mercury in Inclined Glass Tube and Heavy Ball on Inclined Plane
CHAPTER III HYDRAULIC AND HYDRO-MECHANICAL DEVICES - Enbom & Anderson's Pump
CHAPTER IV PNEUMATIC, SIPHON AND HYDRO-PNEUMATIC DEVICES - The Hydrostatical Paradox
CHAPTER V MAGNETIC DEVICES - A Magnetic Pendulum
CHAPTER VI DEVICES UTILIZING CAPILLARY ATTRACTION AND PHYSICAL AFFINITY - Ludeke and Wilckens's Device
CHAPTER VII
A sweeping survey of humanity’s longest‑standing fascination, this work gathers every known attempt to create a self‑motive machine—from medieval sketches to late‑nineteenth‑century contraptions. The author sorts the myriad designs into clear categories, showing the principles each inventor believed would break the laws of physics, and then explains why those ideas ultimately faltered. Detailed illustrations accompany concise commentary, making even the most intricate gears understandable to readers without formal engineering training.
Written for curious tinkerers and history enthusiasts alike, the book treats each failure as a lesson rather than a myth, revealing the blend of imagination and flawed science that fueled the quest. It revisits the massive compilations of Henry Dircks, reorganizing his exhaustive research into a more approachable format. Listeners will come away with a richer sense of why perpetual‑motion dreams persist, and how each mechanical curiosity fits into the broader story of scientific ambition.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (431K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chris Curnow, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2014-01-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
Best known for a lively 1916 survey of perpetual-motion schemes, this elusive writer turned a famously impossible idea into a fascinating tour of invention, error, and human persistence. The result is a curious blend of popular science, mechanical history, and old-fashioned enthusiasm.
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1806–1873
Best remembered as the engineer behind the illusion later famous as Pepper’s Ghost, he also wrote on invention, science, and industry with a lively Victorian curiosity.
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