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Synonyms
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Idioms
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"All things being equal, the
simplest solution tends to be
the right one."
Occam's razor (sometimes spelled
Ockham's razor) is a principle
attributed to the 14th-century
English logician and Franciscan
friar William of Ockham. The
principle states that the
explanation of any phenomenon
should make as few assumptions as
possible, eliminating those that
make no difference in the
observable predictions of the
explanatory hypothesis or theory.
The principle is often expressed
in Latin as the lex parsimoniae
("law of parsimony" or "law of
succinctness"): "entia non sunt
multiplicanda praeter necessitatem",
or "entities should not be
multiplied beyond necessity".
This is often paraphrased as "All
things being equal, the simplest
solution tends to be the right
one." In other words, when
multiple competing theories are
equal in other respects, the
principle recommends selecting the
theory that introduces the fewest
assumptions and postulates the
fewest entities. It is in this
sense that Occam's razor is
usually understood.
Originally a tenet of the
reductionist philosophy of
nominalism, it is more often taken
today as a heuristic maxim (rule
of thumb) that advises economy,
parsimony, or simplicity, often or
especially in scientific theories. |