"On January 16, 1793, the in Paris sentenced to death. Among those who took the fatal decision was... Lazare Carnot... [who] had a passion for the great Persian poet Saadi Shirazi... Carnot names his first son after Saadi. Sadi Carnot is thus born out of poetry and rebellion. As a young man, he develops a passion for those steam engines... beginning to transform the world... In 1824, he writes... "," in which he seeks to understand the theoretical basis of... these machines. The little treatise is packed with mistaken assumptions: he imagines that heat is a concrete entity... fluid that produces energy by "falling" from hot things to cold, just as... a waterfall... But it contains a key idea: that steam engines function... because the heat passes from hot to cold."
January 1, 1970
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Nicolas_L%C3%A9onard_Sadi_Carnot