You are in good company with Walter Maxwell, W2DU, now silent key.  Maxwell was 
an engineer at RCA.  He designed the antennas on several earth orbiting 
satellites and the antenna on the Lunar Rover.  He explained this quite 
succinctly in his book Reflections (all three editions), by use of the 
conjugate matching theorem.  As I recall, that chapter in his book (peer 
reviewed by the RCA engineering department) was called My Antenna Tuner Tunes 
My Antenna.

Gary, K0CX

But if the "tuner" is an LC network, like an adjustable L network, T network, 
Pi network, or a linked-coupled network, then I strongly disagree.
A tuner is a 2-port network. A transmission line is also a 2-port network. Both 
networks obey reciprocity, meaning that what you do to one port of the network 
will have a direct influence on the opposite end.
That being said, if an antenna exhibits a complex impedance at our frequency of 
interest, and that behavior can be corrected (brought to resonance) by the 
application of a particular value of reactance at the antenna's feedpoint, then 
that application of reactance can, for reasons of convenience, be made at the 
"shack end" of the transmission line. As such, the "tuner" in the shack is 
really "tuning" the antenna!
John, KD2BD
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