If what Bob said doesn’t make sense, you may be confused. But this is not a bad thing. Being confused can be a very useful thing, if one is able to recognize it.

One day, students went into their physics class and the teacher showed them a large thick metal plate with one end very close to a fire and the other end a couple meters away. The teacher instructed the students to feel the metal plate, and they felt that the end near the fire was cooler while the end away from the fire was warmer. So the teacher asked the students to write down a guess about why.

Some students wrote things like “because of how metal conducts heat” or “because of how air moves”, but no one wrote “this doesn’t make sense” or “this seems impossible”. So no one got the right answer… which was that, just before the students came into the room, the teacher had turned the plate around.

The students failed because they did not notice their confusion, and thus ignored the most important clue they had.

Usually, when one is confused, it means that one has a false belief or a false assumption. The sensible way to respond to confusion is by trying to identify what that false belief is… and get rid of it.

In this case, I think the confusion may be caused by the false belief that humans in general want artificial lighting to be identical to daylight (or at least on the blackbody line). The available data on this topic indicates that most people actually do not want this, and instead prefer something a bit more rosy in tint. A perfect blackbody radiator may be ideal in a mathematical sense, but that does not mean it produces an ideal lighting spectrum for human use.

Or perhaps the confusion may be caused by the false assumption that Bob doesn’t know what he’s talking about. But he does, and he’s not confusing duv with CCT.