> Im saying that the origin of complex numbers is the ability to do arbitrary rotations and scaling through multiplication, and that i being the sqrt of -1 is the emergent property.

Not true historically -- the origin goes back to Cardano solving cubic equations.

But that point aside, it seems like you are trying to find something like "the true meaning of complex numbers," basing your judgement on some mix of practical application and what seems most intuitive to you. I think that's fruitless. The essence lies precisely in the equivalence of the various conceptions by means of proof. "i" as a way "to do arbitrary rotations and scaling through multiplication", or as a way give the solution space of polynomials closure, or as the equivalence of Taylor series, etc -- these are all structurally the same mathematical "i".

So "i" is all of these things, and all of these things are useful depending on what you're doing. Again, by what principle do you give priority to some uses over others?

>he origin goes back to Cardano solving cubic equations.

Whether or not mathematicians realized this at the time, there is no functional difference in assuming some imaginary number that when multiplied with another imaginary number gives a negative number, and essentially moving in more than 1 dimension on the number line.

Because it was the same way with negative numbers. By creating the "space" of negative numbers allows you do operations like 3-5+6 which has an answer in positive numbers, but if you are restricted to positive only, you can't compute that.

In the same way like I mentioned, Quaternions allow movement through 4 dimentions to arrive at a solution that is not possible to achieve with operations in 3 when you have gimbal lock.

So my argument is that complex numbers are fundamental to this, and any field or topological construction on that is secondary.