technician said:
Second post is fine...no mention of chickens or eggs or naivety
Not really. Physics observes that light displays wavelike nature, and also particle-like nature. So which is it? Wave or particle? Here is the answer physics produced - light is a wave-icle? Is that naive? Did they duck the issue? Tell me, why must the right answer be 1 of 2, why not no. 3?
Post #2 says that charges move because of force due to E field, thus E forces J. This view cannot withstand scrutiny because of the nature of E fields. E fields cannot sustain a current at all, they can only provide a temporary transfer of energy while giving up their energy. A battery connected to a lamp is our example.
The current I is the same inside and outside the battery, since the currents are in series. Inside the battery ions are moving AGAINST the E field/force. These internal ions cannot be acting under the influence of E. E is created by the internal battery current I. Outside the battery, charges move with the E field. In moving charges E field gives up energy. If not replenished, E would lose all its energy and I would cease.
What replenishes the E field? It is I, the internal current, generated by the chemical reaction reduction/oxidation (redox) inside battery. Redox produces I, producing E, which then tranmits energy to free charges outside battery moving charges through lamp. In doing so E keeps losing energy, but gets replenished by redox creating I which restores E field/energy.
The line integral of E over a path is the voltage along that path. So V & I are inter-related and neither is universally the "cause" of the other. Like the "wave-icle" description of light, that is all we have. Those with limited knowledge always place V at the top of the pecking order then treat I as the result of V across R. This model is incomplete and does not account for action inside battery, nor does it account for how E field energy gets replenished.
Post no. 2 is grossly lacking.