Vanadium 50 said:
What sort of answer would satisfy you? (An intrinsic issue with all "why" questions)
I think I understand OP's question, because I've wondered the same thing -- but I'm not sure I can phrase it much better, either.
Maybe the way to put it would be "what is the smallest set of first-principles from which the Lorentz force can be derived?" One reason the Lorentz force doesn't sit well for me comes from the usual pedagogical development of electromagnetism, something like...
1) Introduce Coulomb's law
2) Define electric fields in terms of Coulomb force on 'test charges'
3) Introduce Maxwell Equations for dynamics of these fields
4) Introduce Lorentz force as 'real' Coulomb force
So, it's sort of a circular definition (with Coulomb's law acting as a bootstrap)...though a covariant formulation definitely shows that they're more deeply related.
Also, historically, the Lorentz force took a long time to develop correctly -- if I'm not mistaken, several incorrect forms of it were introduced even AFTER Maxwell's equations...so it would maybe be interesting to see how it was originally derived. I know E. T. Whittaker wrote about this, but it seems to be out-of-print (
WARNING: the book IS in the public domain, but only the FIRST PART has been scanned...so all of the "new" copies on Amazon are in all likelihood going to be just that first part -- since these parasites invariably just use scans from archive.org, rather than actually doing the work themselves...I'm convinced some of them don't even know what they're selling)...so -- anyone have any insight on
that?