Fishy,
Theory is wonderful, but it does not always keep up with reality. I have done this for years (12+), so I know that it works.
A much simpler way to look at this is, what does a plant need to grow?
If you increase any one factor, you must increase the other two factors as well. And then, you get results that few have ever seen.
Some years ago, I purchased 4 Laelia anceps from SBOE. They arrived late in the spring, potted in rocks. I repotted into my mix, and kept them indoors that summer. Each plant set 1 or 2 new growths.
The following year they got the full sun treatment. Each plant (with 4 or 5 pseudobulbs each), set from 3 to 5 new growths with the full sun treatment. The 5 PB plant that set 5 new growths, also produced a flower spike from each of the new growths.
I give the full sun treatment to my Cymbidiums, Aussie Dendrobiums, reed stem Epidendrums and Vandas as well. In all cases, I get plant growth and flower production WAY ahead of what is normally seen.
Lastly, I have tried this treatment for both Den. phalaenopsis types (they can't quite handle the light), and Den. nobile types. The latter can handle it, IF you harden the plant in 2 or 3 steps (heavy shade, then medium, then light and finally full sun). That is too much work, so I don't do that any more.