The rope's state depends on the tension (force), not on energy. The greater the tension, the less it sags. Sag also depends on flexibility, density and direction. A rope hanging vertically does not show sag.
Energy requires force and movement. For a constant rate of movement, the sag might indicate force and hence energy transfer.
If there were no movement (of the truck), then there is no energy transfer, so the force and sag indicate nothing.
If you were pulling the truck which was accelerating and the rope started to sag more, you would have to do a calculation to work out whether the rate of energy transfer were increasing or decreasing. The sag alone would not tell you.
You can't see electric current and it can pass through some conductors with very little noticeable effect. So there aren't even as many clues as with your rope.
There may be some heating with no obvious source and you may guess it's due to an electric current. Even if you're right, you know that electric energy is flowing into and along the wire, but not how much. For that you'd need to know the voltage as well. Also invisible.
To put the boot on the other foot, why would anyone expect it to be obvious that energy is being transmitted?
If I look at a shaft between two machines, I can't tell which way the energy is flowing, nor even if it is flowing at all. A motor could be driving the shaft, but no load is on the other end.
Radio waves are carrying energy hither and thither all around us and we are completely oblivious to them all. When you peer into your microwave oven, until signs of heat appear on the food, you have no idea whether the machine is actually working or not. (You may hear the fan and transformer hum, see the light and the table rotating, but you've no idea if the magnetron is working.)
Look at your central heating radiator. Is it on? No way you can see. You may hear creaks from the expansion as it first heats up, but not much else.
Can you see whether water is flowing through a pipe?
Even light, you'd think you could see. But you can't ! If energy is coming into your eye, yes, but a beam of light passing transversely in front of you is invisible, unless it happens to hit a bit of dust or something and get deflected into your eye. The light going past could be any intensity and going in either direction and you would not know.
If you see a cyclist riding a fixie on a rolling road, can you tell if he's driving it, it's driving him or he's just pedalling at the same speed as the road?
The rope's state depends on the tension (force), not on energy. The greater the tension, the less it sags. Sag also depends on flexibility, density and direction. A rope hanging vertically does not show sag.
Energy requires force and movement. For a constant rate of movement, the sag might indicate force and hence energy transfer.
If there were no movement (of the truck), then there is no energy transfer, so the force and sag indicate nothing.
If you were pulling the truck which was accelerating and the rope started to sag more, you would have to do a calculation to work out whether the rate of energy transfer were increasing or decreasing. The sag alone would not tell you.
You can't see electric current and it can pass through some conductors with very little noticeable effect. So there aren't even as many clues as with your rope.
There may be some heating with no obvious source and you may guess it's due to an electric current. Even if you're right, you know that electric energy is flowing into and along the wire, but not how much. For that you'd need to know the voltage as well. Also invisible.
To put the boot on the other foot, why would anyone expect it to be obvious that energy is being transmitted?
If I look at a shaft between two machines, I can't tell which way the energy is flowing, nor even if it is flowing at all. A motor could be driving the shaft, but no load is on the other end.
Radio waves are carrying energy hither and thither all around us and we are completely oblivious to them all. When you peer into your microwave oven, until signs of heat appear on the food, you have no idea whether the machine is actually working or not. (You may hear the fan and transformer hum, see the light and the table rotating, but you've no idea if the magnetron is working.)
Look at your central heating radiator. Is it on? No way you can see. You may hear creaks from the expansion as it first heats up, but not much else.
Can you see whether water is flowing through a pipe?
Even light, you'd think you could see. But you can't ! If energy is coming into your eye, yes, but a beam of light passing transversely in front of you is invisible, unless it happens to hit a bit of dust or something and get deflected into your eye. The light going past could be any intensity and going in either direction and you would not know.
If you see a cyclist riding a fixie on a rolling road, can you tell if he's driving it, it's driving him or he's just pedalling at the same speed as the road?
Enough?