Sure, OTOH, Disneyland can give ~85,000 paying guests concurrent non-exclusive use of the property with them being really happy with it. AirBnB being the wrong mechanism and/or your house being a suboptimal property for concurrent paid licensed use doesn't change the fundamental analogy between IP and real property.
That's called an apartment building. Or a large house with many bedrooms. Both happen all the time.
In fact, just last weekend I let 20+ people into my house for a party. The notion of privately owned property didn't suddenly become absurd at the beginning of that party...
"Exclusive right to use" is not unique to intellectual property, nor is the ability to scale a piece of private property from 1 user to N concurrent users.