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English
Etymology
From be + -able; coined by Northern Irish physicist John Stewart Bell in 1984 in partial analogy to "observable".
Pronunciation
Noun
beable (plural beables)
- (physics, quantum theory, philosophy) anything that could possibly be, in particular in any of a number of superimposed quantum states
- 1984 J. S. Bell: Beables for Quantum Field Theory CERN-TH.4035/84,
- In particular we will exclude the notion of “observable” in favour of that of “beable”. The beables of the theory are those elements which might correspond to elements of reality, to things which exist. Their existence does not depend on “observation”. Indeed observation and observers must be made out of beables.
I use the term “beable” rather than some more committed term like “being” or “beer” to recall the essentially tentative nature of any physical theory. Such a theory is at best a candidate for the description of nature. Terms like “being”, “beer”, “existent”, etc., would seem to me lacking in humility. In fact “beable” is short for “maybe-able”.
1999, Michael Redhead, From Physics to Philosophy, page 17:In line with the approach to value definiteness taken by modal interpretations, I will also not be requiring that the beables of a quantum system be the same from one quantum state of the system to another.