Any displacement motor coupled with manual trans telegraphs power band to the driver. I don't care if it's your high winding 2.0L or a thumping old Mopar 426 Hemi.
My first seven cars were manual shift. Maybe you missed it but I was responding to a MT owner and specifically made my comments specific to the 2.0L MT. And excuse my French, but you're talking out your butt if you think there is any difference to the way a direct coupled AT like the CX-5 uses "telegraphs power band to the driver" compared to any manual tranny. They are both direct coupled using clutches so they will "telegraph the power band to the driver" in exactly the same manner. I will agree that old school AT slush boxes removed this direct connection with the engine from the driver.
What I was referring to as dulling a driver's skill set was driving a car with a large engine, powerful enough and with such a broad torque range, that gearing becomes secondary. A car like the CX-5 2.0L MT does not perform very well unless the gears are used in a suitable manner for the task on hand.
If you are directly hooked up to the motor you know when it's lugging, when it's pulling hard, when it's topped out.
Modern AT's with lock-up function DO directly hook you up to the motor. Even Formula 1 cars use paddle shifted sequential transmissions (no clutch pedal).
If in front of an auto trans the driver no longer has to listen or pay attention to the car. Displacement has nothing to do with it.
I'm sure a NHRA world champion drag racer running a Powerglide AT would disagree.
Your discussion also illustrates why torque is vastly more useful than hp. Especially if it's moved down the power band in a long stroker such as in the 2.5L or diesels. The sweet spot is wider. High winders must be in the zone or, in the words of the late Gene Berg, "they can't peel the skin off a rotten banana".
Torque is one of the most over-rated and misunderstood aspects of performance engines.
It matters very little at what RPM your power is produced, what matters is how wide the spread of that power is. A flat torque curve over a large rpm range is more useful than a less flat torque curve over a smaller RPM range. But thanks to gearing options when designing a vehicle or modifying one, it doesn't matter whether that broad spread of power is between 10,000-20,000 rpm's or between 2000 and 4000 rpm's. But if these examples of vastly different engines are even remotely competitive, the peak torque figures of the engine that get's the job done between 2000-4000 rpm's will be 5 times higher than the higher reving engine but might have very similar peak hp figures (and yet they might be roughly equal in competitiveness). Of course in the racing world we have class rules so you probably won't see this kind of disparity of engine styles but it illustrates my point.
The fallacy that torque is more important than peak hp started when hot rudders built engines that made a lot more peak hp but gave up a flat, broad torque curve to achieve the peak hp numbers. But it's not about big peak torque numbers low in the rpm range, it's about having a broad, flat torque curve-the actual rpm range that is used to achieve this is not important to the level of performance achieved. The actual performance is better defined by the average HP made through the broad flat torque peak.
For example, a Formula 1 car might make peak torque at 15,000 rpm's and be able to rev over 20,000 rpm (even if limited by regulations to 18-19,000 rpm).
The 2.0L CX-5 has a very broad, flat torque curve but it doesn't start to get good until about 3,000 rpm up to 6000 rpm with another 500 rpm on top of that for convenience and flexibility with shifting. Still, the area between 1,500 and 3,000 is very useable for everyday driving but this is not the part of the power curve that is used for performance driving. The point I'm making is the torque curve is not necessarily broader if it's lower in the rpm range. My Ducati motorcycles are well known for their broad, flat and very useable/flexible power band. But the good part of the range is 5,500-10,500 for racing purposes.