One thing that people including Gary butcher is the difference between clipping and profile mismatches. Gary kept talking about the dulling of colors that occurs when you interpret AbobeRGB numbers as if they were sRGB, but he referred to it on several occasions as clipping, which it's not. The difference would be pretty easy to show visually with a photo that exhibits the classic blocked up areas of clipping vs hue and saturation shifts of a profile mismatch.
Regarding number 4, I think a good, accurate analogy might help people understand. I think the main problem is that the question is ill-formed. AdobeRGB and sRGB are just spaces, they don't inherently have any information (other than specifications for primaries, white point, etc). Until you actually have a pixel, there isn't any color information. The analogy I like, which I think is accurate enough, is a thermometer. If you have a thermometer that goes from 0-100º C and another that goes from 0-200º C, which one has more information? It's kind of a dumb question right? Thermometers don't have information — the information is the actual measurements. If I take to two measurements with each, do I have more information if I use the 0-200º thermometer? No, you have exactly two measurements worth of information in each case. Those measurement could be specified by how accurate they and this could be expressed as bits. You probably have to draw the wonk-line somewhere before you start talking about Claude Shannon, but I'm not sure where that is. A question you can ask with this analogy is this: how fine of a distinction in temperature can a person make? If you determined that and added a scale in these units to the thermometer, then the 0-200º thermometer would measure more of these units. But that's different than saying it has more information and very different from saying that's all the precision we need in practice.