Exactly it gets rid of unwanted effects such as the probe wires needing to follow a certain path, but it does not get rid of what you are measuring.
You still get the same result in Dr. Lewins experiment if you use the formal definition of voltage when subtracting out the probes. It just so happens that he set the probe wires in such a path that you need to subtract 0V to get the result. If you move the wires you get a diferent result on the voltmeters. Does that mean that the voltage across A and B has changed? No you just messed up your probing.
Here resides all your struggle with reality.
When you "right-probe" something you are not aware that what you are doing is exactly to make your probes follow a certain path.
In Lewin's experiment, we have a WANTED field. This is the field that's generating the EMF to power the resistors. So if you "right-probe" that circuit you will cancel out the effect of this EMF on your meter, treating this field as UNWANTED, and you are going measure nonsense.
If you compensate out probing effects you can place both voltmeters on the left side in Dr. Lewins circuit and still get 2 different voltages as a result. If you do all your probe compensation math with textbook voltage you get two different values for voltage no matter where the voltmeters or the wires are.
If you use the "efective voltage" in the math to calculate the error voltage on the probes to subtract out you get the same result on both voltmeters no matter where they are. (Just like here you could just place one voltmeter in the middle for this error voltage to be 0V and thus make no need to compensate it out)
Correct probing practices don't break Dr. Lewins two voltages across A and B experiment, but given that the path the probe wires take in Dr. Lewins physical experiment is important it should be said why the probe wires take the path they do. This particular path requires no compensation of probe error for what he is trying to measure, all other paths do.
And what is the significance of that voltage? Is it the EMF? No. Is it the voltage across one of the components? No. It's just an arbitrary voltage defined by an arbitrarily precise positioning of your probes. And that's exactly what Lewin wanted to prove.
You are confounding the concept with the technique. You take the "right probing" technique as a dogma, and you think that the technique can overrule the concept that created it. Unbelievable!
Well in the lecture where he talks about it he uses the summa operator:
http://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/II_22.html#Ch22-S3
Yes. He does.
And what is on the left side of the equals sign? A sea horse? A pregnant, elongated, slanted S? Or is it a line integral?
Any five year old kid knows that two things separated by an equals sign are equivalent. So the algebraic sum of the voltages around a circuit is equal to the line integral of the electric field around the path determined by the circuit (in the case where there are no varying fields as Feynman explains earlier).
He also explains why analyzing circuits as lumped is a good idea in the section above the one linked.
Provided you can LUMP THEM! You can only lump model a circuit if, and I quote,
there is no magnetic field in the region outside the individual circuit elements. It's in the text. Didn't you read it? Or you need us to repeat it to you like a broken record every day? If you want to know why, read Feynman's previous chapters.
Lewin's circuit HAS a magnetic field outside the components, so it is UNLUMPABLE.
They would be mutually exclusive if they would explain the SAME thing as being two different things.
The text you linked is cool because it is here where Feynman derives Kirchhoff from Maxwell, showing that Kirchhoff is just a special case. All the complicated math he had already done in the previous chapters to come right to this point.
So you cannot argue anymore that Kirchhoff is one thing and Maxwell another. The proof is in the pudding.
Kirchhoffs circuit laws describe voltage and current relationships in circuit meshes. Maxwells equations describe the relationships of electromagnetic fields in our universe.
And where do you think our circuit meshes live? Outside the universe? Perhaps in the heavens? I can't believe I'm reading this.
You certainly can, here is how: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/102458/how-can-kvl-kcl-be-derived-from-maxwell-equations
However as you can see the equation you get as a result looks rather messy. This is sort of the physical world incarnation of Kirchhoffs law, but it does work with magnetic fields present, since the Maxwells equations that it came from also work fine with magnetic fields present.
So we do have two Kirchhoff's laws now? One version is the "physical world incarnation of" it. The other is the regular one.
We have then three valid theories to describe exactly the same phenomenon: Maxwell, "physical" Kirchhoff and "regular" Kirchhoff. Wow!
Kirchhoff only stays so beautifully simple when you keep it within circuit meshes where it was meant to be used. Hence why it is so useful there.
Wouldn't be beautifully simpler if we could understand that there's ONLY ONE theory to describe electricity and magnetism: Maxwell, and that Kirchhoff is just special case of it?
I certainly agree for cases when the formal definition of voltage is used.
Your brain has already realized that the cozy shell you created around your thoughts are no longer holding the water. The clear sign of it is the invention of the "effective voltage", "textbook-defined voltage", "physical Kirchhoff", "good probing technique" and other mental bodges to conciliate your set of axioms with the conflicting reality.
This thread is interminable because every time you try to make sense of your "theory" someone shows you a contradiction.
A theory can only hold if it is not contradictory.
Get rid of this as soon as possible, before someone gets hurt (including yourself).
Or in the case that you are not allowed to use coupled inductors in circuit models, i sure hope that is not the case since that makes modeling transformers really tricky (And Dr. Lewins experimental circuit is just a glorified transformer)
Every animal is vulnerable during the molt process. That happens to us when we need to get rid of concepts we thought were truths but aren't. Give time to yourself. Learn Maxwell piecemeal.
Well in that case we can close the thread cause Maxwell beat us to the goal of ascertaining the truths of electromagnetism by a good 150 years.
Cool! That's what I'm trying to do since 28 November when I told
ogden to get better education (and I was subsequently called a troll). What we need to do now is to shut up and learn Maxwell (me included).