User:Seyyed saleh fotouhi

Transformation machine The concept of a transformation machine refers to a steam engine. In other words, the car or steam engine was like a transformation machine that changed the world and, above all, the continent of Europe. The invention of the steam engine by the Scottish scientist James Watt and the subsequent Industrial Revolution between 1760 and 1840 created a huge wave of change in the world. The invention of the steam engine, a symbol of the Industrial Revolution, led Europe and the rest of the world from one traditional period to another. The invention of the steam engine revolutionized the fields of weaving, transportation, and agriculture, and marked the beginning of new inventions such as locomotives and steamships. With the invention of the steam engine and the formation of the Industrial Revolution, the feudal economic system became an industrial system, and the landlord-land relationship became a labor-capital relationship. The industrial revolution created by the steam engine led to the formation of a new class of countries called the working class, which also expanded trade and commerce. The invention of the steam engine was the beginning of the growing progress of European countries and the new inventions of scientists and inventors in various fields. The invention of the steam engine and the subsequent formation of the Industrial Revolution, in addition to great and important achievements for the whole world, especially in Europe, also had disadvantages such as the migration of peasants, exploitation of workers, the expansion of European colonialism, looting of resources and The mines brought Asian and African countries and environmental pollution. In the steam engine and the industrial revolution, there was a ground for great changes and achievements that led to the evolution of the world. References English Wikipedia James A. Korik, Industrial Revolution (2012), translated by Mehdi Haghighatkhah, Phoenix Publications, ISBN 1-319-311-964 Anna Sprawl, Mr. Machine Steam (2011), Mohammad Reza Afzali, Fatemi Publications, ISBN 0-392-318-964