Good point about the spares, but it is still not all conductors even with the spares counted. Maybe the title of the table should be CCC or potentially CCC. This would automatically drop the grounding conductors that are already excluded.
The NEC previously used to use the term "current-carrying conductors" for this section. As of 2014, the NEC switched this term to "number of conductors" with a footnote to provide further details. The footnote needs to be there, to confirm that you are required to count spare conductors as if they are active at the time of installation. It also advises that when you have mutually exclusive conductors that cannot carry current simultaneously, you don't need to count them all. You only count the maximum possible quantity that could be carrying current at any given time. For example: the traveler conductors of a three-way switching circuit, as they are routed between the switches.
The EGC is never counted, since it doesn't carry current under ordinary circumstances.
The neutral is conditional on whether it gets counted or not.
Summary of when it gets counted:
1. Mandatory part of the return path, such as phase-to-neutral 2-wire circuits, and phase-to-phase 3-wire circuits from a WYE system that feed a group of single phase-to-neutral loads.
2. Harmonic-intensive non-linear loads
Summary of when it doesn't get counted:
1. When it is possible for balanced loads to yield no current on the neutral, even when the load is unbalanced. No matter what the degree of imbalance, the heat generated among 4 wires never exceeds the heat generated among 3 wires carrying their maximum possible current equally. Same logic applies to split-phase systems, for 3 wires and 2 wires respectively.
2. When it is only used for instrumentation purposes, like voltage and phase measurement, and therefore carries negligible amps. Likely milliamps.