I doubt it would confuse most people if explained carefully. You just explain that you CAN actually have complex exponents, then explain what I did in my second last post to show that it actually is on the unit circle. And if one uses exponentiation, one wants e^(x+y) = e^x·e^y as this is the most basic rule of exponentiation. Then suggest that one may DEFINE it for all complex numbers via e^(x+iy) = e^x·e^(iy) = e^x·(cos(x)+i·sin(x)) as this definition then works (fulfills e^(x+y) = e^x·e^y) by those trig. theorems. From that, just conclude e^(i·pi)+1=0 for extra fun^^
We're talking about students who often get confused by
rational exponents, let alone real ones. I agree with what you are saying and will likely mention it offhand for those who are genuinely interested.
The major problem with math at this level is that there is little justification given to studying anything. There are so many awesome things that go on in the complex numbers. I really wish I could share that with my students, but there are three problems:
1) Most are simply not prepared for any "math" that goes much beyond rote memorization.
2) Most don't care and just want a passing grade to satisfy some requirement or another.
3) Even if parts 1 and 2 don't hold, I need to uphold the standard curriculum, which means I don't have too much time to spare.
I usually make a few offhand remarks about more general results, and emphasize that
I use a lot of this material regularly. That helps, but there is only so much that can be done.