The fact that those references use certain terminology does not mean that they are using it appropriately. Certain terms are used inappropriately by convention. For example
Brewing Science and Practice uses the term
sanitise just three times whereas it uses the term
sterilise so many times that I gave up counting them, but sterilise is clearly used very loosely. It also uses
disinfect quite a lot too.
Chris-x1 wrote:
Disinfection is a more
nebulous [vague] term it may be considered the removal or inhibition of micro organisms that are likely to cause disease. Some groups are at much greater risk of developing infectious disesase....Thus defining disinfection involves defining the group of people at risk
That is a load of rubbish. Disinfection applies to the microbiological cleanliness of inanimate objects, whether those microbes cause disease or not. In the same way as antisepsis applies specifically to the human skin, and antibiotic internally.
I am comfortable with either disinfection or (by convention) sterilisation.
Sanitisation, however, is more concerned with removing the
vectors of disease, whether those vectors be dirt, flies, pouring oil on wells or moving your poo out of harm's way. It is only concerned with pathogens anyway, not anything else. Pathogens do not spoil beer - it is the 'anything else' that spoils beer.
As infection is by far the biggest cause of spoiled homebrew, I personally demand something more than mere sanitisation no matter whose definition applies.