I mentioned #3 because if we have the oscillation frequency then we shouldnt need loop gain > 1. Barkhausen didnt need that right? But maybe this is more theoretical then Winterstone wants to be right now.
I guess I'm just not following your logic here. It seems that suddenly you dropped the gain>1 and gain compression criteria. While my mind can see how #6 might tie in to both of those conditions, and could possibly replace them (too subtly for my taste), I don't see why #3, which relates to startup energy, should replace those. I don't know about Winterstone, but that is too theoretical for me, even if I get to the point of understanding it. I don't see why sufficient conditions should not be very clear and obvious, and more in line with things we need to do to actually make the oscillator.
My guess is that you are trying to focus back in to the linear conditions, and not the nonlinear ones.
One of the other things i wanted to stress is that if the power supply turn on is too slow, the oscillator may not start. This could happen in a system like a solar system. Should we worry about this? It's interesting and it does happen so i think we should.
Are you talking about "planets and a sun" or "solar cells and a battery"?

If this could happen to an oscillator circuit, while all our supposed sufficient conditions are in place, then yes, of course we should worry about this. It means we failed to identify all important conditions to complete the requirement of being "sufficient". Can you give an example circuit? An example would help us identify the cause and identify the missing condtion(s).
The question i asked you before was how did you see one oscillator work and the other didnt work. The standard worked and the inverted oscillator did not work when you did a simulation i guess. Then i mentioned the two gain resistors. Then you said you had them right.
Well what i was driving at was if you set the resistors correctly (slightly off from their ideal values) you should be able to see both oscillators either:
1. Have an amplitude that rises continuously until the output saturates.
2. Have an amplitude that falls continuously until it reaches zero output.
3. Have an amplitude that stays constant for a very long time.
Thank you. I understand you now. I did try different values of the gain slightly off from the ideal, but I didn't do that systematically. I don't remember seeing those effects, but then again, I wasn't looking for them. Those facts will give me a way to check and have confidence that the simulation is correct. Originally, I was trying to just see if I had oscillations or not, and it seems that even that behavior indicates no stable oscillation. But, I will check this.
Let me be clear about how I derived the simulation equations, in case this will affect the result. I used an Opamp modeled with finite gain (10000 to 100000) and a first order compensation pole at ω=10 to 100 rad/s.
By the way, in your simulations, how to you input the initial energy? Is it a starting signal at the right frequency? or noise? or initial conditions? Or, if you didn't do a simulation, will these different ways of starting affect the behavior you outlined in 1, 2 and 3 above?