To be fair you cannot include the ES175, ES-335 or any of the Gibson or similar arch tops because they are semi acoustic Jim and we were talking solid bodies here. Getting back to the argument about tone woods, I do think there's a lot of rubbish spoken about 'special' woods being this, that or the other, eg, I have a beautiful pink/red Strat body from a cheap Johnson guitar that is made from very thick MDF or ply, I've forgotten which, but it sounds terrific when assembled.
I've also had ash and alder bodies that sounded 'dead', one was a Fender from 1963, the other an eighties Squier, but I do agree that other timbers may do the job just as well. The guy is right about the Alder,Ash and Mahogany being plentiful, but those three woods do add different characters to the overall sound, as I said before I have heard it first hand. Also the difference an all maple neck makes, compared to a rosewood or ebony fingerboard is very obvious.
A few years ago I was a big fan of Fender 57/62 pickups and had a couple of Strats fitted with them which sounded great. One day I did a bit of swapping around and put them on another Strat and they didn't sound anywhere near as good. I did the same with some Fender Custom Shop 54s and had similar results, so it is the sum of the parts that gives you the desired tone. You have to match the bits and pieces carefully which is why it's difficult to comment when people ask the questions like, is this type of pickup or this type of neck any good. The answer is I can't tell without trying them on the body first.
I found that 57/62 pickups sound good on Alder bodies but I ditched the Custom Shop 54s as they were too bright, I'd tried those on an Ash body and didn't try them on Alder as I hadn't learned what I now know.
