I'm talking about when it's left to accumulate in the lungs.
I was saying that the issue is with the bloodstream, not the lungs. Lung function isn't there to have different air molecules sitting in your lungs. When your lungs fill with CO2, the pathways that scrub CO2 out of the blood become backed up/blocked, which causes the negative effect of lowering pH in the blood.
Like I said though, I do actually agree that it's a function of both, I'm just approaching it in a different way than I normally would think about it.
Why can you last longer after breathing in pure oxygen than after breathing normal air?
It's called hypocapnia, which is triggered by hyperventilation. It's when you see swimmers breathing quickly before trying to hold their breath. It reduces respiratory drive by lowering the CO2 concentration in your blood. What this does is reduce the body's belief that it needs O2 due to the
Bohr effect. The Bohr effect points to a cause/effect relationship between CO2 and O2, not just a correlation.
The subject at hand is most likely due to the fact that they hyperventilate before even inhaling the O2. Effectively doing what is normally done to increase holding your breathe, and then to fill an extra supply of O2 in your lungs so your body takes longer to black out, which then returns your breathing to normal.
Although it's a pretty pointless issue anyway, given that breathing necessarily serves both roles
It's pointless in that all of us are currently breathing right now, but it's just a discussion point. We aren't trying to figure out how to get our bodies to force us to breathe so we don't die while discussing this.
Why would oxygen remove the CO2 more completely than regular air? If it does, it shows that that these things are two sides of one coin. It strikes me as meaningless to say that we breathe to release CO2 "instead" of for oxygen. We need oxygen to do so. Even if the trigger is CO2, that doesn't make it any less part of the complete cycle.
Again, the O2 isn't removing the CO2 more completely, it just allows you to stay conscious longer while your CO2 level is returning to normal. Obviously these are two sides of a coin, and nobody is arguing that it isn't part of the cycle. It's purely about the trigger mechanism. As I said earlier, keeping your toes warm is part of the complete cycle of the heartbeat, but I sincerely doubt it has anything to do with the trigger mechanism.
What happens if someone breathes in a pure inert gas? It would be perfectly possible to dispense with CO2 on out breaths. Would that not cause the person to try to breathe faster in a bid to gain oxygen? Or is this a situation in which this makes a genuine practical difference?
Again, based on the Bohr effect, the hyperventilation is for the reduction of CO2 in the body, thus tricking yourself into believing you need less O2.
You need to breathe either way which is why I agree with you in actual practice. In theory though, it could actually have some basis of truth.