such imponderable human factors as aesthetic sensibility.
Examples of imponderable
imponderable
It's too big, too ambivalent, too imponderable, too illogical, too impractical.
From the post-gazette.com
One imponderable is the effect of slow growth on state and local governments.
From the businessweek.com
Predicting what will happen requires answering three imponderable questions.
From the roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com
Imponderable mortality made real, Boltanski's work is profoundly affecting.
From the guardian.co.uk
So why the board tolerated under-using Ontario for so long is an imponderable mystery.
From the pe.com
The big imponderable is whether there is even more squirrelling to come.
From the economist.com
There is only one thing that worries the Nixon people now-the imponderable Wallace Factor.
From the time.com
Poetry is a great imponderable, since it describes and changes the climate of the mind.
From the time.com
That's an argument that you can never fully resolve because it rests on an imponderable.
From the theatlantic.com
More examples
A factor whose effects cannot be accurately assessed; "human behavior depends on many imponderables"
Difficult or impossible to evaluate with precision; "such imponderable human factors as aesthetic sensibility"
Imponderables is a series of eleven books written by David Feldman. The books examine, investigate, and explain common, yet puzzling phenomena. Examples include "Why do your eyes hurt when you are tired?", "Why do judges wear black robes?", and "Why do you rarely see purple Christmas lights? ...
(The Imponderables) The Imponderables is a Canadian sketch comedy troupe based in Toronto. They are the winners of the Canadian Comedy Award for Best Sketch Troupe.
An imponderable substance or body; specifically, in the plural, a name formerly applied to heat, light, electricity, and magnetism; Not ponderable; without sensible or appreciable weight; incapable of being weighed