Only time for a partial reply for now:
First, my concern over sqrt(-1) in electrical engineering, penfold has it right: "and the j is an operator rather than a quantity ... it is stretching it a bit far to say that it is a physical quantity".
Did I say it was a physical quantity? Please show me (I've tried to find where I might've implied that but I don't see it). j is not an Ohm. But it is a representation of phase-shift in Ohms and a damn good one. Is that not physically relevant?
Tricky semantics. What I and I assume penfold were referring to was somewhere between a physical unit and representation as a tool. You said sqrt(-1) "has immense physical significance, just as 'zero' and 'negative' have immense physical significance" which I took to be that middle meaning. Saying
j is physically relevant is different from saying sqrt(-1) is, to me. The latter being a very abstract mathematical concept, but
j being defined as a practical tool by Steinmetz (yes, with overlap). sqrt(-1) is the first whole positive imaginary number (if there is such a thing) hence a quantity (of sorts), j is a rotation operator as defined by SandyCox in (a, b)(c, d) = (ac-bd, ad+bc) (with j as b or d). They happen to be algebraically identical.
I've explained more since, but I hope that helps explain a bit better where I think I'm coming from.
I don't think it is any sort of tautology to say mathematical concepts are not real, if one then goes on and asserts that some part has physical relevance. Not all engineers are naturals at maths and can easily identify where that link appears (ie goes from nothing to something without explanation). Some people here seem to be struggling with it too - perhaps from over-familiarity.
You might as well be arguing that multiplication has no 'physical relevance' to engineering because you could just add the numbers up... like, yes? What is your point? Should we count on our fingers and toes because applying math makes us feel dumb?
Yes, if it "adds" nothing practical or needs to be applied abstractly by some engineers who might then not know what they are doing as clearly.
I've said, many times, that engineers can and do get confused by this. And there are some engineers better at it than others. None of that is an excuse. There are way more problems I can solve quickly and efficiently with multiplication than I can with addition - even though multiplication is just an extension of addition.
And that's why. We don't want engineers getting confused on the job. I've 'moved the ruler along' n times to check a calculation, or tipped liquid into a measuring container to work out volume that could have been calculated.
It's not what I meant anyway. My reply was referring to your suggestion that saying all numbers are imaginary (I'm paraphrasing) is a tautology because everyone knows that. For something like sqrt(-1), I don't know where it gets real.
Time for one more before nie nies:
I'm not citing waffle-y texts at you. I'm citing actual engineering practices. You can take them or leave them.
https://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/accircuits/power-triangle.html
Although I've clarified more since, this is exactly what I don't have a problem with.
j is defined only in the annotations on the diagrams as a 90 degree shift pictorially and as reactance.
j doesn't appear in any of the body text or its formulae. The only hint as to what
j might be (as a symbol) is mention of "which is the vector sum of the resistance and reactance".
This is what I mean by things like "to the point they realise sqrt(-1) has no physical relevance, with j being the unit vector that I say it is".