Interesting article if you're into the history of science.
One hundred and one years ago, Danish physicist Niels Bohr proposed a radical theory together with two young colleagues – Hendrik Kramers and John Slater – in an attempt to resolve some of the most perplexing issues in fundamental physics at the time. Entitled “The Quantum Theory of Radiation”, and published in the Philosophical Magazine, their hypothesis was quickly proved wrong, and has since become a mere footnote in the history of quantum mechanics.
Despite its swift demise, their theory perfectly illustrates the sense of crisis felt by physicists at that moment, and the radical ideas they were prepared to contemplate to resolve it. For in their 1924 paper Bohr and his colleagues argued that the discovery of the “quantum of action” might require the abandonment of nothing less than the first law of thermodynamics: the conservation of energy.