This chapter is spiritually dedicated to Socrates, Aristotle,
Copernicus, Galileo and other forthright characters of the history, those who
contributed their boundless energy to the
healthy development of the absolute science.
Long ago, a five-year-old child, the son of an
industrialist lay peacefully sleeping unaware of what was about to take
place. His father’s factory was ablaze, lighting up the sky with light.
Although shocked the industrialist decided to let his son also witness the terrifying event. The little lad was awoken and with his father, witnessed the awful but magical sight of giant flames leaping towards the sky lighting up the whole city. When asked what he was thinking about, the little child replied, “Daddy, I will give light to the world.”
The little boy was Thomas Alva Edison. Since that day he worked
towards realizing that vision. After a series of experiments and 25,000 odd
failures, he finally invented the electric bulb. Ironically enough, this
brilliant mind had been expelled from the school in his student days. Still
with a father like his, who instilled the art of creative and constructive
vision in his son, we can nurture thousands of