Crumbles said:
You seem to take the meaning of imaginary as meaning 'non-existent'.
imaginaryadj1 a : existing only in imagination: lacking factual reality
b :formed or characterized imaginatively or arbitrarily
2 : containing or relating to the imaginary unit
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition
I guess it all depends on what your interpretation if imaginary is.
When you used the word "imaginary" to describe the magnetic field I think you are confusing its use in the term "imaginary number" with its use applied elsewhere. You can't apply it as it is used in the term "imaginary number" to any other situation. In any other situation it means : lacking factual reality, existing only in someone's mind.
I don't find the issue of the meaning of words to be any more nugatory than any other issue that arises that might get in the way of communicating physics concepts.
You are right about the $10,000 bonus but it is also true that Tesla solved Edison's DC generator problem by proposing an AC generator instead, which Edison was against.
Actually, I was not right about the ten thousand dollars: it was fifty thousand;
"Before long Tesla observed ways in which the primitive Edison Dynamos could be made to work more efficiently, even though limited to the production of direct current. He proposed a plan for redesigning them and said it would not only improve their service but would save a lot of money.
"The astute businessman in Edison brightened at the mention of the latter, but he realized the project Tesla had described was major and would take a long time. "There's fifty thousand dollars in it for you - if you can do it," he said...
"...It took Tesla the better part of the year to finish redesigning Edison's dynamos. When at last the job was done, he went to his boss to report complete success and, not incidently, to ask when he might receive his $50,000.
"Edison swept back his high back shoes from his desk and fell forward openmouthed.
"Tesla," he exclaimed, "you don't understand our American humor."
-Tesla: Man Out Of Time
by Margaret Cheney
Watch 'Tesla: Master of Lighting' from PBS and you'll get the whole picture.
I have seen this show, thanks. Edisons did cut any discussion of converting to AC short, but this refusal on his part to consider converting to AC had nothing to do with why Tesla quit the Edison Company. Tesla, as you can see from the quote above, was content to help Edison with his DC so long as he believed he'd be properly paid.