In a parallel circuit the current changes but the voltage doesnt. If you take a bulb out from a parallel circuit, there will be no resistance on that wire making it more likely to have current go through it. This would dim the other two because less current is going towards them. If you use the formula to calculate power in the other bulbs, they would have lower power and less brightness. Yes the overall resistance would increase if you took one bulb out.
In series, if you take a bulb out there would be no more light. The bulb is like a connection, if you take it out how is the current going to flow? Imagine having 1 battery and 1 bulb, if you take the bulb out how would the wires be connected if the bulb connected the wires?
You are correct about series, but not so correct about parallel.
This is a common misconception that is easily cleared up by a real life example. Household circuits are wired in parallel so that all of the outlets and switches are
independent of one another. Turning off your computer, unplugging a lamp, or switching on a switch does not change any of the other items in your house drawing current.
Parallel pathways are independent of one another, so removing a parallel light bulb won't change the intensity of any of the remaining lights in parallel.
You can verify this using math in one of two ways. First, parallel circuit elements have the same voltage drop, so they have the same value for I x R. Consider disconnecting a resistor in parallel. That doesn't change the resistance of the remaining resistors or the voltage drop across each remaining resistor, so the current through each remaining resistor cannot change.
You can also solve this by considering three parallel resistors with resistances of 2 ohms, 3 ohms, and 6 ohms connected to a 12 V battery. Equivalent resistance is 1 ohm, so I
total is 12 amps. The 12 amps of total current splits into 6 amps through the 2-ohm resistor, 4 amps through the 3-ohm resistor, and 2 amps through the 6-ohm resistor. All three experience a voltage drop of 12 V and the sum of the currents (6 + 4 + 2) is 12.
We can disconnect any of the three resistors, so let's consider the 2-ohm resistor. This leaves a 3-ohm resistor and 6-ohm resistor connected in parallel to a 12 V battery. The equivalent resistance is now 2 ohms, so the total current is 6 amps. The 6 amps of total current splits into 4 amps through the 3-ohm resistor and 2 amps through the 6-ohm resistor. Both resistors experience a voltage drop of 12 V and the sum of the currents (4 + 2) is 6 amps. The current through the two remaining resistors is the same whether the 2-ohm resistor is connected or not.
The math is lengthy, but helps to make the conceptual result more believable.