The best way to understand the vector is to imagine the rotor having been removed, and replaced it with a super agile magnetic compass that sits in the center.
Now, as a test of the basics, you send a DC current through the run winding of a single phase machine. You'll see the compass align with an induced magnetic field. This field has a direction, and strength. Thus it is vector.
Now, let's put aside the single phase machine for while and place a three phase machine on the bench. Again, it just has the compass inside.
We could attach this machine to a three phase power outlet, but for this experiment, I want you to observe what happens. So, we'll attach the motor to a low frequency three phase source (say a motor turning a three phase generator, but through gears to reduce it's speed).
Once again, you can see the compass pointing out the direction of a magnetic field, but now, the compass is rotating. The magnetic vector is now smoothly rotating .
(Historic note - Nikola Tesla claimed to have imagined this while sitting on a bench. Thus he found a solution to make motors that ran on AC!)
If we speed up our three phase generator, the compass will spin correspondingly faster as it follows the field.
Now, let's go back to our single phase motor and apply a low frequency single phase supply to the run winding. We see that the compass points for awhile in one direction than very quickly flips to the opposite direction, and then back... Now, our magnetic field is not rotating. It is simply building in one direction, collapsing, and then building in the other direction. It's very difficult to imagine how this could turn anything...
But, we see that the single phase motor has an additional winding, the start winding. If we supply current to this winding through a capacitor, the current will have a phase lead.
When we watch the compass, we see that it now turns.
But, we are missing something! Our compass tells direction, but fails to tell us the strength of the field. Suppose we pull the compass out, place thumbtack a spring in the middle with a magnet at the end of the spring. Now, we can see the magnet being pulled in an ellipse because the strong run winding only pulls hard along one line, and the weaker, start winding, pulls a little bit off to the sides.
Let's but the amateur back in the single phase winding, disconnect the start winding and apply power. It just sits there buzzing. There is no circular path to rotate the amateur. If we reconnect the start winding, the motor starts turning. That's not surprising. Even though the start winding is weak, it does describe some sort of rotating vector (an ellipse) that gets the armature rotating.
Now for a really fun experiment. While the motor is rotating, we disconnect the start winding. And, it keeps turning! (Tesla didn't anticipate this!)
To understand what's happening, we have to examine the armature. It has copper or aluminum conductors all along the outside, while the middle is all iron plates stacked one atop another. The armature is essentially an inductor with a shorted winding. If you have current in an inductor that's in series with a resistor, you will see that the current will decay by i = i_beginning s e^(tR/L)
So, a really low resistance in the winding, R along with a really large inductance, L, will give you a cylindrical lump that will respond to changes in it's magnetic environment slowly. Slowly enough that it resembles a magnet after being exposed to the magnetic vector, but doesn't have time to stop being a magnet by the time the vector has been reversed.
In the end, you have an armature that has it's own magnetic field that's continually charged by the stator's field and yet always lagging behind it being physically dragged by the difference in angle between the two fields.
Now for the bonus material -
Suppose you put a handle or something on the armature and physically crank it as fast as the rotating magnetic vector spins. Then, the fields align, and the motor is not producing any torque (that's your job, the man with the crank, lol). The motor will now be spinning at it's synchronous speed.
Suppose you're feeling your Wheaties and choose to turn the motor even faster? Now, the weirdness begins. This motor that has now magnets, field coils, etc, is now a generator.