Let me borrow what 3 db said to you in post#26:
"I have a degree in Electrical and am well versed in this. "

and please stop trying to explain those things that I myself have posted many times on this forum!!
I really cannot understand why you still fail to understand I was asking you to define "true power" for loads such as loudspeakers and electric motors. When you finally took the time to define it you did say what I was waiting for you to say:
"I'm defining true power as the power consumed by the load and converted into heat, sound, mechanical energy or what ever." instead of the simplistic I²R for a RLC (resistance, inductance, capacitance) circuit. And, the key words "converted into sound, mechanical energy....."
I sure hope others can see the confusion you have created by saying it is the true power consumed by the load (in your previous posts) that blow a speaker. Yes, as EE I am saying true power in the case of speakers, motors and loads of similar complex nature do take on meanings other than just the power converted into heat as you stated in your own definition. Engineers do not design an electric motor to consume power in the form of heat, they simply cannot avoid such
losses, their goal is to design motors that converts electrical power to mechanical power, not heat.
I do thank you for your patience, but again please please stop repeatedly explaining things that people know all too well already and have previously told you so. How would you feel about it if I kept trying to explain the same to you? Actually I do remember long time ago I was the one who had to correct you once when you disregard the consideration of the "phase angle" thing.
Finally I have to repeat just one more time that the only main point I say you are incorrect, is the way you use the term true power in the very application (speakers, motors, not just a electrical circuit/network) we have been discussing. The definition you have just provided is fine, but not the way you had it taken out of context in previous posts. If I cannot make this clear to you by now I probably never will so I am ready to quit.
You sure can maintain your position and if you now want to once again define true power for a speaker load as I²R then we are in fact saying exactly the same thing so you are correct but I have also been quite consistent in saying that you are confusing the issue.
You stated in your own definition, that true power is not just power that converts into heat, but also sound and mechanical power. There is a possibilty, however unlikely, that the OP might have thought you meant the sound part rather than the I²R part because it is normal to think that in this case true power means the power converted to sound power plus a little bit of mechanical power due to the fact that the speaker cone does move quite a bit at high frequencies. We both know the efficiency of speakers are extremely low but others may not. In other words, people may intuitively think that true power for a heater is the power consumed to convert electrical power (strictly speaking consumption unit is energy not power) into heat, for a motor it is the mechanical power plus a little losses in the form of heat, for light bulbs it is the light it emits plus losses in the form of heat, and therefore for loudspeaker it is the sound it produces plus losses in the form of heat.
At the end of the day, may be you can call it six and I call it half a dozen and we can move on to other less boring topics next time. I know what the truth and fact are though.
Just curious, since you have studied amps and speakers extensively, have you studied Fourier Analysis? When I studied it in university I really didn't think too much of it until I had to take a course in communication years later. Then I realize how useful it is and consider it indispensable for anyone interested in audio and telecommunication engineering. It is the best thing, if not the only thing I know that allows engineers to analyze signal waveforms and understand what harmonics really are. Without Mr. Fournier, we would have no cell phones and we probably won't have anything to argue about.