Étude sur le Mouvement Permanent des Fluides by François de Salvert

(8 User reviews)   1270
By Morgan Nguyen Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Legends
Salvert, François de, 1842-1918 Salvert, François de, 1842-1918
French
Hey, have you heard of this old French book about perpetual motion in fluids? It sounds like something out of a steampunk novel, but it’s real. The author, François de Salvert, was obsessed with this idea that you could get a fluid to move forever without any outside power. Think about it: a river that flows uphill on its own, or a pump that never stops. He wasn’t just daydreaming; he wrote a whole scientific study about it in 1879. The wild part is, we know today that it’s physically impossible. The laws of thermodynamics say you can’t get something for nothing. So the real mystery of this book isn’t about solving a puzzle—it’s about watching a brilliant, stubborn mind try to beat the universe’s rules. It’s a beautiful, flawed artifact from a time when people still believed you could invent a machine that ran on pure hope and cleverness. I found it completely fascinating, not for the science that’s right, but for the human story of trying so hard to prove something that can’t be true.
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Let's be clear from the start: Étude sur le Mouvement Permanent des Fluides is not a novel. You won't find any dashing heroes or dramatic love stories here. Published in 1879, it's a scientific monograph by François de Salvert, a French engineer and inventor. His goal was straightforward and, frankly, audacious: to prove that perpetual motion in liquids was not just a fantasy, but a real, achievable possibility.

The Story

The 'plot' is the argument itself. Salvert lays out his theories with detailed diagrams and mathematical reasoning. He describes hypothetical systems—complex arrangements of tubes, siphons, and chambers—where he believes a fluid could be set in motion and then keep moving indefinitely, powering itself. He's trying to build a case, piece by careful piece, for a world where energy isn't conserved, where friction and loss can be designed out of existence. Reading it is like watching someone construct an elaborate clockwork mouse, convinced it will eventually run on its own forever.

Why You Should Read It

Here's why I loved it: this book is a portrait of magnificent failure. We know Salvert was wrong. Modern physics settled that debate long ago. But that knowledge changes the reading experience completely. Instead of learning about fluid dynamics, you're peering into the mind of a passionate, intelligent man on a quixotic quest. His writing isn't dry; it's earnest and determined. You can feel his conviction on every page. It becomes less about the science and more about the human spirit's relentless drive to conquer the impossible, even when the universe itself says 'no.' It’s strangely moving.

Final Verdict

This is a niche read, but a rewarding one. It's perfect for history of science enthusiasts, steampunk fans, or anyone who loves a good intellectual detective story. Don't read it to learn correct physics. Read it to meet François de Salvert and spend a few hours in his 19th-century world, where a brilliant idea could still defy the fundamental laws of nature, at least on paper. It's a captivating snapshot of a time when the boundaries of the possible seemed just a little more flexible.

Jackson Miller
1 year ago

Read this on my tablet, looks great.

Ethan Ramirez
1 month ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. Exactly what I needed.

William Wright
1 year ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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