impalpable - meaning and definition. What is impalpable
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What (who) is impalpable - definition

ENTITY WHOSE EXISTENCE, NATURE, PROPERTIES, QUALITIES OR RELATIONS ARE NOT DIRECTLY OBSERVABLE BY HUMANS
The reality of unobservables; Impalpable; Unobservables; Unobservable entities; Unobservable entity

Impalpable         
·adj Not material; intangible; incorporeal.
II. Impalpable ·adj Not palpable; that cannot be felt; extremely fine, so that no grit can be perceived by touch.
III. Impalpable ·adj Not apprehensible, or readily apprehensible, by the mind; unreal; as, impalpable distinctions.
impalpable         
¦ adjective
1. unable to be felt by touch.
2. not easily comprehended.
Derivatives
impalpability noun
impalpably adverb
impalpable         
a.
1.
Intangible, very fine, delicate, attenuated, not palpable, not to be felt, not perceptible by the touch.
2.
Imperceptible, shadowy, indistinct, inapprehensible, unsubstantial.

Wikipedia

Unobservable

An unobservable (also called impalpable) is an entity whose existence, nature, properties, qualities or relations are not directly observable by humans. In philosophy of science, typical examples of "unobservables" are the force of gravity, causation and beliefs or desires.: 7  The distinction between observable and unobservable plays a central role in Immanuel Kant's distinction between noumena and phenomena as well as in John Locke's distinction between primary and secondary qualities. The theory that unobservables posited by scientific theories exist is referred to as scientific realism. It contrasts with instrumentalism, which asserts that we should withhold ontological commitments to unobservables even though it is useful for scientific theories to refer to them. There is considerable disagreement about which objects should be classified as unobservable, for example, whether bacteria studied using microscopes or positrons studied using cloud chambers count as unobservable. Different notions of unobservability have been formulated corresponding to different types of obstacles to their observation.

Examples of use of impalpable
1. Yeats‘s case the tendency, even on the material side of his art, is all in the direction of the impalpable, of a more and more studied evasion of strict form.
2. That would be Yiddish, phonetically, for madness. (Actually, it is used more jovially, the dictionary says, as in "A wacky, irrational, absurd belief; nonsense. ‘No one can figure it out; it‘s plain mishegoss.‘ " Or something "so silly or unreal that it defies explanation.") · "Chief Chameleon in Charge of Chaos for Imaginative Impalpable Ideology and Altered Analysis (C4I3A2)." The title, retired Beltway bandit John F.