List of spurious inventions
This is a list of spurious inventions - technologies which are generally considered to not possess their claimed capabilities, to be hoaxes, or to not have ever existed in the first place.
- Angel Light- according to its inventor, this device could make walls, hands, and stealth shielding transparent.
- Black box- popular name for a diagnostic machine made by Albert Abrams. It supposedly could diagnose diseases based on their special vibrations that can be sensed along someone's spine.[1]
- Chronovisor- a time viewer claimed to have produced photographs and recordings of the ancient past.
- Cloudbuster- a device that could purportedly make rain through manipulating atmospheric orgone, a kind of energy considered to be pseudoscientific.[2]
- Teleforce- a weapon, also known as Nikola Tesla's death ray or peace ray, that would accelerate pellets of material to a high velocity so as to cause significant damage from a long distance.[3]
- Nikola Tesla electric car hoax- alleged advanced electric car.
- Fleischmann–Pons cold fusion experiment- attempt to cause nuclear fusion using electrolysis to achieve the high compression ratio and mobility of deuterium.[4]
- Kryakutnoy- fictional inventor of hot air balloons.[5]
- Newman energy machine- supposed free-energy machine invented by Joe W. Newman.[6]
- Perpetual motion machines- hypothetical machines that do not need any added energy or force to continue motion. All attempts as of yet are considered spurious, and such a machine is considered impossible by modern thermodynamics.[7]
See also
References
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. p. 37. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. p. 55. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
- Reece, Gregory L. (2009). Weird science and bizarre beliefs : mysterious creatures, lost worlds, and amazing inventions. I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd. pp. 200, 203. ISBN 978 1 84511 756 6.
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. pp. 56–57. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. p. 236. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. p. 236. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
- Williams, William F., ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. Book Builders Incorporated. pp. 248, 262. ISBN 0-8160-3351-X.
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