Donald Miller said:
"Not only are these light rays in these types of light sources diffuse (scattered) but they are also not collimated (directed along a defined axis). Thus we experience a loss of sharpness between different density regions of the camera negative, we also experience a lack of information on the print."
"However because the light is not collimated and diffuse we have effectively "washed" away the defect by the scattering of light. We must recognize, it would seem, that we can not "wash" away the effects of dust and defects without suffering an accompanying loss of local contrast and sharp detail."
I think the original discussion falls apart in the first paragraph here. A jump is made correlating the colimation of light with the amount of sharpness or resolution. I disagree. An increase in light colimation will increase the contrast of the projected image, but it will not affect sharpeness, or even resolution.
As others have pointed out, the Callier Effect will lead to an increase in contrast when using a point source. This is an increase in overall contrast (and yes, even including microcontrast). It does not cause an increase in resolution. If negatives are not correctly matched for the type of printing light source, there will be an increase in appearant contrast, which the viewer of the subsequent prints may mistake for an increase in sharpeness or resolution.
Resolution will be limited by the enlarging lens, and not by the type of light source.
As to the second paragraph about dust, I covered the explaination of that in a previous post. It has nothing to do with a lack of resolution or sharpness. It has to do with the way the diffuse light is able to get around and under the dust.
You have to remember that light travels in a straight line, unless it is reflected off something (ignoring refraction here, of course). You also have to remember that the grains of silver in the negative are 3 dimensional, and irregularly shaped. That means that there are lots of little random surfaces on the developed grains of silver that can catch light from all angles, and reflect some of that light directly into the lens. So any dust that is between the diffuse light source and the film will be minimized.
It's kind of neat to realize that light from one side of the diffusion light head can fly all the way across the enlarger head until it goes into the neg, and gets bounced at an oblique angle by a speck of silver grain, and then go flying into the lens and onto the paper. That beam of light does a complete end run around our speck of dust sitting way up above the surface of the negative with the diffusion enlarger. The point source has no option but to run straight into the speck of dust and make a shadow on our print.
Notice that nowhere does the resolution of the enlarging system come into play here in minimizing the dust with a diffusion enlarger. Local contrast is affected when compared to a point source due to the Callier Effect, but not resolution.