It depends on what your real focus and intent was in #1:
Taken as stated, you want to know if magnetic field is conservative, but I assume the lecture you were referring to was
this one , and the 'divided house' bit referred to
here
Well as per #4, static or quasi-static magnetic fields, as against the properties of solenoidal 'transformer action' electric fields, are two quite different topics. In one sense a magnetic field is non-conservative in that it is solenoidal in nature (field lines always forming closed loops), being defined as
B = ∇×
A. Thus if magnetic monopoles exist (none found so far), the energy exchange with a magnetic field would be entirely path dependent, hence non-conservative. However in an important sense magnetic fields are conservative in that if you move two electromagnets relative to each other, the change in electrical work done in the electromagnet conductor windings, (induced transformer action E fields acting on the currents flowing), plus mechanical work extracted, is exactly compensated for in the change in net magnetic field energy. The same sort of thing applies in the case of permanent magnet relative motions, though in that case the accurate statement is that net change in mechanical+heat energy is exactly compensated in the net change in magnetic potential energy ∫
m.Bdv. The latter also equal to the net change in magnetic field energy - if computed on the basis of the Gilbert model using fictitious magnetic poles. [That entails working from a scalar potential formulation of
H field, see
here and
here]
If your focus was on Lewin's lecture, it is simply not about magnetic fields as such, though the ∂
B/∂t mentioned is closely association with the electric fields of real interest there.