Occam’s Razor

views updated May 21 2018

Occams Razor

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Occams Razor (Ockhams Razor) is also known as the Law of Economy, the Law of Parsimony, or the Principle of Parsimony. It says entities are not to be multiplied beyond necessity ( Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem ). Another form of the principle is plurality should not be posited without necessity ( Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate ).

The principle claims that to explain something, all competing explanations should be shaved away until only the simplest remains. When applied to the construction of theories explaining a phenomenon in the event that competing hypotheses provide contradictory explanations, the one that uses the least theoretical assumptions is probably the more accurate. If a detective is reconstructing the facts of a murder, the theory of the crime will be the one that best fits the facts and is usually the simplest hypothesis. This principle agrees with the philosophy of sciences understanding that natures character is simple.

The idea of parsimonious simplicity is found in limited form in the works of Aristotle. It was championed by William of Ockham (c. 12801349), after whom the term Occams Razor was named. It was also used by Galileo Galilee (15641642) when discussing the data describing the orbits of the planets in support of the Copernican model.

Opponents of Occams razor proposed antirazors which say where fewer entities do not suffice, posit more. For example, in biblical textual analysis, if a scholar is faced with variant readings from different manuscripts the problem is which variant is the one closest to the original autograph of the biblical writer? The general rule, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is to choose the more complicated reading. The reason is that a few scribes and others who copied the thousands of surviving manuscripts sometimes tried to correct an apparently unclear, complicated reading by simplifying it.

Occams razor is used in philosophy, learning theory, econometrics, public policy choices and other disciplines. In public policy choices the principle is used by analysts to show that self-interest motivates voters and that the desire for reelection motives legislators, both of which are the simplest explanations for voter and legislator behavior.

Econometrics uses Occams razor in labor economics, financial operations studies, resource allocations, and other areas as an aided method for discovery, problem solving, or learning. It is applied as the principle that what works well and is simple will probably work best in decisions concerning poverty funding for the developing world.

Currently Occams razor is a characteristic of alife (artificial life) studies of ecological systems. Alife uses computers, simulations and other techniques in an information systems bottom up approach to study the ecology associated with living organisms and how they interact with their environment.

Some anti-razorists reject Occams razor as inadequate to explain complicated phenomena. The facts of experience tell them that a complicated model may require a complicated explanation, while at other times simplicity is the most effective.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Spade, Paul Vincent, ed. 1999. The Cambridge Companion to Ockham. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.

Zellner, Arnold. Hugo A. Keuzenkamp, and Michael McAleer, eds. 2001. Simplicity, Inference and Modeling: Keeping it Sophisticatedly Simple. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.

Andrew J. Waskey

Occam's razor

views updated May 17 2018

Occam's razor (Ockham's razor) The axiom, proposed by William of Occam ( William Ockham, c.1280–1349), that pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate (‘multiplicity ought not to be posited without necessity’); i.e. when alternative hypotheses exist, the one requiring the fewest assumptions should be preferred.

Occams razor

views updated May 21 2018

Occam's razor(Ockham's razor) The axiom, proposed by William of Occam ( William Ockham, c.1280–1349), that pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate (‘multiplicity ought not to be posited without necessity’); i.e. when alternative hypotheses exist, the one requiring the fewest assumptions should be preferred.

Occam's razor

views updated May 18 2018

Occam's razor the principle (attributed to the English philosopher and Franciscan friar William of Occam, c.1285–1349) that in explaining a thing no more assumptions should be made than are necessary. The principle is often invoked to defend reductionism or nominalism.

Occams razor

views updated May 29 2018

Occam's razor See William of Occam