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replied 1316d
Anyway, I suppose an experiment can be scaled down considerably from the puzzle text, but still it can get very expensive because wires must be superconducting.
replied 1316d
I think the 1st guy seems to allude to the prospect of an experiment, so something might happen. Don't know about superconductors.
replied 1307d
Not superconductors, but real experiment

Atm I am not sure the superconduction demand makes much of a difference.
replied 1307d
nice. But i’m not sure about his omission of inductance. Seems like that’ll be in part 2 though.
replied 1307d
Just by reading this, not looking stuff up or rewatching vid, I don't really know what you are talking about here. But didn't he say that something like that will come in part 2?
replied 1307d
Yes. He didn’t mention inductance except to admit he didn’t mention it. He implied he would give fuller explanations in part 2.
replied 1307d
So what is your problem with him not (yet) talking properly about inductance? Do you see a problem with his experiment or arguments that this will address?
replied 1307d
Maybe it’s me who’s wrong. But current in 1 wire inducing opposite current in a parallel wire is well understood. To discuss the phenomenon yet not name it seems strange.
replied 1307d
Maybe a better experiment might have the switch and bulb on separate but parallel circuits. dunno.
replied 1316d
I am but a humble layman in such matters and suspect you know more than me, but i still don't see how either model ultimately predicts a fundamentally different outcome.
replied 1316d
I may not be humble but I am definitely nothing more than a layman. Anyway, I thought there was some disagreement, but the first vid, some time since I watched it, remember few details
replied 1316d
I also suspect all involved know this and are playing the 'scientific controversy' angle for clicks.