Your answer reminds me of the book Siddartha by Herman Hesse. In the exchange, he tells the Buddha that his teaching others is flawed, as one can't describe accurately what they have found to someone who has not found it. The book was more elegant in the conveying of this, I'm reaching back some years here from memory. I found that one of the poignant grips of the book.
I do find it ironic that despite your view on this as outlined above, you seek to spark exactly such responses from those of us you interact with. I wonder what it is you hunt, and how often such exchanges have served as a catalyst for you in finding it, if even briefly.
I believe that if we draw the brightest possible line between FACT and OPINION (QUANTA and QUALIA), we will circumvent the majority of human miscommunication.
In 24 seconds,