Let's sum it up, to see if we agree: 16 bit w/out oversampling allow for about 96 dB SNR. Using dithering you can have more than 96 dB SNR by taking advance of human hearing characteristics (an 'A' frequency weighting filter can be used for computations).
@xiphmont has a footnote in the article I linked that notes how with an infinite window size, the dynamic range is effectively infinite; of course our ears don't have an effectively infinite window size. We can come up with a representative approximation for perceptual purposes.
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Ultimately the real point is: the dynamic range of our ears is defined as the difference between the loudest (ear-damage level) sound and the quietest sound *we can perceive*. Since *we can perceive* a sound encoded at <-96dB in 16bit PCM, that is *not* the dynamic range.
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Remember the absolute threshold of hearing is defined for a *pure tone*, not broadband noise! It would be way higher for broadband white noise.
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