Abstract

It is shown that the statements of Macdonald [Phys. Lett. A 220 (1996) 351] about the contradictoriness of the results of our previous paper [Phys. Lett. A 196 (1994) 247] and the difficulties connected with the use of these results for a consistent quantitative interpretation of experimental data on the non-Debye response of disordered conductors are based on erroneous assumptions and lead to physically unsatisfactory consequences.

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