Naturally, you can come to any conclusion you are comfortable with, but I find that it is just easier to take the fundamentally engineering term and break it down by its etymological parts and become victim to the same error causing process that has plagued the term. In other words, just because the parts of the word can mean such a thing, it doesn't necessarily hold that such an interpretation of the term as opposed to how it was originally employed is accurate.I think I was putting to much effort into this. Thinking this through again from the definition of the word itself as a starting point.
Counter is a way of saying oppose or to oppose
Poise is another word for balance
So the word itself means to oppose with balance. When it comes to RF that translates to cancel, as that is what an opposite yet balanced RF signal would do to another.
If you look at a monopole with a flat even number radial system the radials opposite each other radiate RF in such a way that they balance and oppose each other. Does this not fit the definition of the word counterpoise? So here it does not relate to the effects of a radial system has on the antenna, but the effects the radial system has on itself.
The direct translation of the word does not say nor imply anything about capacitive coupling, so using it as only meaning a raised radial system that is capacitively coupled to the ground would not fit the definition of the word. Remember, it's origins are from old AM Broadcast theory. AM broadcast even today use huge antennas usually mounted near the ground. There would have been no need to have meaning beyond such an antenna system as it was likely cost prohibitive to raise it any significant amount above ground. Such a setup near the ground with its capacitive coupling would have lessened the ground losses thus making the antenna more efficient.
Should we limit this old use of a word used with antennas that were much more limited because of their size to other frequencies that are in use, most of which are on orders of magnitude higher in frequency and thus are able to use much smaller antennas that can be raised quite high? Does the meaning of the word itself still apply even there is little to no capacitive coupling because of the possible heights of these antennas?
At this point I have to say yes.
Reading the article I changed my mind on what counterpoise meant when referring to antenna systems, now I have changed my mind again to something similar to what I originally thought, although with a bit more understanding of the definition of the word itself. In other words, I may have been mostly right but for the wrong reasons.
The DB
I might add that this whole thing of opposing radials cancelling out each other tends to add frustration to the discussion. After all, if such be the case how would one explain the need of it at all. It would cease to be functionally relevant and as good as none at all. Perhaps I am missing something.
In my studies of equal and balancing elements, as in a dipole, each is on opposite cycles of positive and negatively charged currents at the frequency of use so that there is no cancellation of each other, but a forcing of the current outward as radio frequency waves. In the case of a set of GP radials the entire radial network act as the opposing part and I believe all of them are charged the same as each other at the same time.
I think you can see this when you realize that the GP radials are in their entirety connected to the antenna system by way the braid of the coax, or 1/2 half the feedline. If cancellation were an issue in such an arrangement even a dipole would not work, no?.
I think the idea you brought over from the article you linked is flawed in that respect.
Maybe I'm wrong and neither my GP antennas, nor my dipole I talked to Hawaii with today do not work.