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{{Short description|Philosophical problem-solving principle}}
'''Occam's [[Razor (philosophy)|razor]]''' (or '''Ockham's razor'''<ref>{{Cite book
{{Other uses|Occam's Razor (disambiguation)}}
|url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Occam%27s%20razor
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2024}}
|chapter=Occam's razor
|title=[[Webster's Dictionary|Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary]]
|edition=11th
|year=2003
|isbn=0-87779-809-5
|location=[[New York City|New York]]
|publisher=[[Merriam-Webster]]
}}</ref>) is often expressed in [[Latin]] as the '''''lex parsimoniae''''' (translating to the '''law of [[parsimony]]''', '''law of [[frugality|economy]]''' or '''law of succinctness'''). The principle is popularly, but incorrectly, summarized as "the simplest explanation is more likely the correct one." The principle of Occam's Razor recommends selecting the competing hypothesis that makes the fewest new assumptions (aka postulates, entities). It is also important that the two hypotheses be equal in other respects; for instance, they must both sufficiently explain available data in the first place. It is in this sense that Occam's razor is usually understood.<ref>http://www.theness.com/index.php/the-razor-in-the-toolbox/</ref>


In [[philosophy]], '''Occam's razor''' (also spelled '''Ockham's razor''' or '''Ocham's razor'''; {{langx|la|novacula Occami}}) is the [[problem-solving]] principle that recommends searching for explanations constructed with the smallest possible set of elements. It is also known as the '''principle of parsimony''' or the '''law of parsimony''' ({{langx|la|lex parsimoniae}}). Attributed to [[William of Ockham]], a 14th-century English [[philosopher]] and [[theologian]], it is frequently cited as {{lang|la|Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem}}, which translates as "Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity",<ref>{{Cite web |last=Barry |first=C. M. |date=27 May 2014 |title=Who sharpened Occam's Razor? |url=https://www.irishphilosophy.com/2014/05/27/who-sharpened-occams-razor |website=Irish Philosophy |access-date=5 August 2022 |archive-date=5 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221005062453/https://www.irishphilosophy.com/2014/05/27/who-sharpened-occams-razor/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schaffer |first1=Jonathan |year=2015 |title=What Not to Multiply Without Necessity |url=http://www.jonathanschaffer.org/laser.pdf |journal=Australasian Journal of Philosophy |volume=93 |issue=4 |pages=644–664 |doi=10.1080/00048402.2014.992447 |s2cid=16923735 |access-date=8 August 2019 |archive-date=9 September 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200909103500/http://www.jonathanschaffer.org/laser.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> although Occam never used these exact words. Popularly, the principle is sometimes paraphrased as "of two competing theories, the simpler explanation of an entity is to be preferred."<ref name="Britannica2021">{{cite web |last1=Duignan |first1=Brian |title=Occam's Razor |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Occams-razor |access-date=11 May 2021 |website=Encyclopedia Britannica |archive-date=25 September 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230925232653/https://www.britannica.com/topic/Occams-razor |url-status=live }}</ref>
Occam's Razor is attributed to the 14th-century English [[logician]], theologian and [[Franciscan]] [[friar]] Father [[William of Ockham]] (de Okham) who wrote
"entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity" (''entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem''). This is also phrased as ''pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate'' ("plurality should not be posited without necessity").<ref name="Britannica">{{Cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/424706/Ockhams-razor |title=Ockham’s razor |author= |year=2010 |work=Encyclopædia Britannica |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica Online |accessdate=12 June 2010}}</ref>
To quote [[Isaac Newton]], "We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances. Therefore, to the same natural effects we must, so far as possible, assign the same causes."<ref name="Hawking">{{Cite book
|title=On the Shoulders of Giants
|author=Stephen
|last=Hawking
|authorlink=Stephen Hawking
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=0eRZr_HK0LgC&pg=PA731
|page=731
|isbn=076241698x
|year=2003
|publisher=Running Press
}}</ref>


In science, Occam’s razor is used as a [[heuristic]] (rule of thumb) to guide scientists in the development of theoretical models rather than as an arbiter between published models.<ref name="fn_(100)">Hugh G. Gauch, Scientific Method in Practice, Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-521-01708-4, 9780521017084</ref><ref name="fn_(101)">Roald Hoffmann, Vladimir I. Minkin, Barry K. Carpenter, Ockham's Razor and Chemistry, HYLE—International Journal for Philosophy of Chemistry, Vol. 3, pp. 3–28, (1997).</ref>
This [[philosophical razor]] advocates that when presented with competing [[hypothesis|hypotheses]] about the same prediction and both hypotheses have equal explanatory power, one should prefer the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions,<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Ball |first=Philip |date=11 August 2016 |title=The Tyranny of Simple Explanations |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/08/occams-razor/495332/ |access-date=2 February 2023 |website=The Atlantic |language=en |archive-date=2 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230202232303/https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/08/occams-razor/495332/ |url-status=live }}</ref> and that this is not meant to be a way of choosing between hypotheses that make different predictions. Similarly, in science, Occam's razor is used as an [[Abductive reasoning|abductive]] [[heuristic]] in the development of theoretical models rather than as a rigorous arbiter between candidate models.<ref name="fn_(100)">Hugh G. Gauch, ''Scientific Method in Practice, Cambridge University Press'', 2003, {{ISBN|0-521-01708-4}}, {{ISBN|978-0-521-01708-4}}.</ref><ref name="fn_(101)">{{Cite journal|last1=Hoffman|first1=Roald|last2=Minkin|first2=Vladimir I.|last3=Carpenter|first3=Barry K.|date=1997|title=Ockham's Razor and Chemistry|url=http://www.hyle.org/journal/issues/3/hoffman.htm|journal=Hyle: International Journal for Philosophy of Chemistry|volume=3|pages=3–28|access-date=30 May 2004|archive-date=14 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180714163131/http://www.hyle.org/journal/issues/3/hoffman.htm|url-status=live}}</ref>


== History ==
The phrase ''Occam's razor'' did not appear until a few centuries after William of Ockham's death in 1347. [[Libert Froidmont]], in his ''On Christian Philosophy of the Soul'', gives him credit for the phrase, speaking of "''novacula occami''".<ref name="Sober 2015 4">{{Cite book |title=Ockam's Razor: A User's Manual |last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2015 |isbn=978-1107692534 |pages=4}}</ref> Ockham did not invent this principle, but its fame—and its association with him—may be due to the frequency and effectiveness with which he used it.<ref>Roger Ariew, Ockham's Razor: A Historical and Philosophical Analysis of Ockham's Principle of Parsimony, 1976</ref> Ockham stated the principle in various ways, but the most popular version, "Entities are not to be multiplied without necessity" ({{lang|la|Non sunt multiplicanda entia sine necessitate}}) was formulated by the Irish [[Franciscan]] philosopher [[John Punch (theologian)|John Punch]] in his 1639 commentary on the works of [[Duns Scotus]].<ref name="commentary">Johannes Poncius's commentary on John Duns Scotus's ''Opus Oxoniense,'' book III, dist. 34, q. 1. in John Duns Scotus ''Opera Omnia'', vol.15, Ed. Luke Wadding, Louvain (1639), reprinted Paris: Vives, (1894) p.483a</ref>


=== Formulations before William of Ockham ===
In the scientific method, Occam's razor is not considered an irrefutable principle of [[logic]], and certainly not a scientific result.<ref name="fn_(109)">Alan Baker, Simplicity, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, (2004) http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/simplicity/</ref><ref name="fn_(110)">Courtney A, Courtney M: Comments Regarding "On the Nature Of Science", Physics in Canada, Vol. 64, No. 3 (2008), p7-8.</ref><ref name="fn_(111)">Dieter Gernert, Ockham's Razor and Its Improper Use, Journal of Scientific Exploration, Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 135–140, (2007).</ref><ref name="fn_(112)">Elliott Sober, Let’s Razor Occam’s Razor, p. 73-93, from Dudley Knowles (ed.) Explanation and Its Limits, Cambridge University Press (1994).</ref>
[[File:Pluralitas.jpg|thumb|Part of a page from [[John Duns Scotus]]'s book ''Commentaria oxoniensia ad IV libros magistri Sententiarus'', showing the words: "{{lang|la|Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate}}", i.e., "Plurality is not to be posited without necessity"]]


The origins of what has come to be known as Occam's razor are traceable to the works of earlier philosophers such as [[John Duns Scotus]] (1265–1308), [[Robert Grosseteste]] (1175–1253), [[Maimonides]] (Moses ben-Maimon, 1138–1204), and even [[Aristotle]] (384–322&nbsp;BC).<ref>Aristotle, ''Physics'' 189a15, ''On the Heavens'' 271a33. See also Franklin, ''op cit''. note 44 to chap. 9.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Charlesworth |first=M. J. |year=1956 |title=Aristotle's Razor |journal=Philosophical Studies |volume=6 |pages=105–112 | doi=10.5840/philstudies1956606}}</ref> Aristotle writes in his ''[[Posterior Analytics]]'', "We may assume the superiority {{lang|la|ceteris paribus}} [other things being equal] of the demonstration which derives from fewer postulates or hypotheses." [[Ptolemy]] ({{nowrap|{{Circa |AD 90|168}}}}) stated, "We consider it a good principle to explain the phenomena by the simplest hypothesis possible."<ref name="Franklin">{{Cite book |title=The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability before Pascal |last=Franklin |first=James |publisher=The Johns Hopkins University Press |year=2001 |author-link=James Franklin (philosopher)}} Chap 9. p.&nbsp;241.</ref>


Phrases such as "It is vain to do with more what can be done with fewer" and "A plurality is not to be posited without necessity" were commonplace in 13th-century [[Scholasticism|scholastic]] writing.<ref name="Franklin" /> Robert Grosseteste, in ''Commentary on'' [Aristotle's] ''the Posterior Analytics Books'' (''Commentarius in Posteriorum Analyticorum Libros'') ({{Circa|1217–1220}}), declares: "That is better and more valuable which requires fewer, other circumstances being equal... For if one thing were demonstrated from many and another thing from fewer equally known premises, clearly that is better which is from fewer because it makes us know quickly, just as a universal demonstration is better than particular because it produces knowledge from fewer premises. Similarly in natural science, in moral science, and in metaphysics the best is that which needs no premises and the better that which needs the fewer, other circumstances being equal."<ref>[[Alistair Cameron Crombie]], ''Robert Grosseteste and the Origins of Experimental Science 1100–1700'' (1953) pp. 85–86</ref>
==History==
{{quote|
[[William of Ockham]] (''c''. 1285–1349) is remembered as an influential nominalist but his popular fame as a great logician rests chiefly on the maxim attributed to him and known as Ockham's razor. The term ''razor'' (the German "Ockhams Messer" translates to "Occam's knife") refers to distinguising between two theories either by "shaving away" unnecessary assumptions or cutting apart two similar theories.


The ''[[Summa Theologica]]'' of [[Thomas Aquinas]] (1225–1274) states that "it is superfluous to suppose that what can be accounted for by a few principles has been produced by many." Aquinas uses this principle to construct an objection to [[God's existence]], an objection that he in turn answers and refutes generally (cf. ''[[quinque viae]]''), and specifically, through an argument based on [[causality]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1002.htm#article3 |title=SUMMA THEOLOGICA: The existence of God (Prima Pars, Q. 2) |publisher=Newadvent.org |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130428053715/http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1002.htm#article3 |archive-date=28 April 2013 |access-date=26 March 2013}}</ref> Hence, Aquinas acknowledges the principle that today is known as Occam's razor, but prefers causal explanations to other simple explanations (cf. also [[Correlation does not imply causation]]).
This maxim seems to represent the general tendency of Occam's [[philosophy]], but it has not been found in any of his writings. His nearest pronouncement seems to be ''Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate'' [Plurality must never be posited without necessity], which occurs in his theological work on the ''Sentences of Peter Lombard'' (''Quaestiones et decisiones in quattuor libros Sententiarum Petri Lombardi'' (ed. Lugd., 1495), i, dist. 27, qu. 2, K).


=== William of Ockham ===
In his ''Summa Totius Logicae'', i. 12, Ockham cites the principle of economy, ''Frustra fit per plura quod potest fieri per pauciora'' [It is futile to do with more things that which can be done with fewer]. |Thorburn, 1918, pp. 352–3; [[William Kneale (logician)|Kneale]] and Kneale, 1962, p. 243.<ref>Inline Latin translations added</ref>}}
[[File:William of Ockham - Logica 1341.jpg|thumb|[[Manuscript]] illustration of William of Ockham]]
[[William of Ockham]] (''circa'' 1287–1347) was an English Franciscan friar and [[theologian]], an influential medieval philosopher and a [[nominalist]]. His popular fame as a great logician rests chiefly on the maxim attributed to him and known as Occam's razor. The term ''razor'' refers to distinguishing between two hypotheses either by "shaving away" unnecessary assumptions or cutting apart two similar conclusions.


While it has been claimed that Occam's razor is not found in any of William's writings,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://boingboing.net/2013/02/11/what-ockham-really-said.html |title=What Ockham really said |last=Vallee |first=Jacques |date=11 February 2013 |publisher=Boing Boing |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130331171919/http://boingboing.net/2013/02/11/what-ockham-really-said.html |archive-date=31 March 2013 |access-date=26 March 2013}}</ref> one can cite statements such as {{Lang|la|Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate}} ("Plurality must never be posited without necessity"), which occurs in his theological work on the [[The Four Books of Sentences|''Sentences of Peter Lombard'']] (''Quaestiones et decisiones in quattuor libros Sententiarum Petri Lombardi''; ed. Lugd., 1495, i, dist. 27, qu. 2, K).
[[Image:Pluralitas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Part of a page from Duns Scotus' book ''Ordinatio'': ''Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate'', i.e. "Plurality is not to be posited without necessity"]]


Nevertheless, the precise words sometimes attributed to William of Ockham, {{lang|la|Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem}} (Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity),<ref>{{Cite book |title=The linguistics Student's Handbook |last=Bauer |first=Laurie |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |year=2007 |location=Edinburgh}} p. 155.</ref> are absent in his extant works;<ref>{{Cite book |title=A Dictionary of Philosophy |last=Flew |first=Antony |publisher=Pan Books |year=1979 |location=London |author-link=Antony Flew}} p. 253.</ref> this particular phrasing comes from [[John Punch (theologian)|John Punch]],<ref>[[Alistair Cameron Crombie|Crombie, Alistair Cameron]] (1959), ''Medieval and Early Modern Philosophy'', Cambridge, MA: Harvard, Vol. 2, p. 30.</ref> who described the principle as a "common axiom" (''axioma vulgare'') of the Scholastics.<ref name="commentary" /> William of Ockham himself seems to restrict the operation of this principle in matters pertaining to miracles and God's power, considering a plurality of miracles possible in the [[Eucharist]]{{Explain | date = February 2021 | reason = Currently impossible to figure out what this means (exceptions including Christians). Probably should just drop it as the first clause may be enough, or should just footnote it. }} simply because it pleases God.<ref name="Franklin" />
The origins of what has come to be known as Ockham's razor are traceable to the works of earlier philosophers such as [[Maimonides]] (Rabbi Moises ben Maimon, 1138–1204), [[John Duns Scotus]] (1265–1308), and even [[Aristotle]] (384–322 BC) (Charlesworth 1956).


This principle is sometimes phrased as {{lang|la|Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate}} ("Plurality should not be posited without necessity").<ref name="Britannica">{{Cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/424706/Ockhams-razor |title=Ockham's razor |year=2010 |publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica Online |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100823154602/https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/424706/Ockhams-razor |archive-date=23 August 2010 |access-date=12 June 2010 |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica}}</ref> In his ''Summa Totius Logicae'', i. 12, William of Ockham cites the principle of economy, {{lang|la|Frustra fit per plura quod potest fieri per pauciora}} ("It is futile to do with more things that which can be done with fewer"; Thorburn, 1918, pp.&nbsp;352–53; [[William Kneale (logician)|Kneale]] and Kneale, 1962, p.&nbsp;243.)
The term "Ockham's razor" first appeared in 1852 in the works of [[Sir William Hamilton, 9th Baronet]] (1788–1856), centuries after Ockham's death. Ockham did not invent this "razor"; its association with him may be due to the frequency and effectiveness with which he used it (Ariew 1976). Though Ockham stated the principle in various ways, the most popular version was not written by him, but by [[John Ponce]] from [[County Cork|Cork]] [[Ireland]] in 1639 (Meyer 1957).


=== Later formulations ===
The version of the Razor most often found in Ockham's work is ''Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate'', “For nothing ought to be posited without a reason given, unless it is self-evident (literally, known through itself) or known by experience or proved by the authority of Sacred Scripture.”<ref name="ReferenceA">Standford encyclopedia of Philosophy</ref>
To quote [[Isaac Newton]], "We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances. Therefore, to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes."<ref name="Hawking">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0eRZr_HK0LgC&pg=PA731 |title=On the Shoulders of Giants |last=Hawking |first=Stephen |publisher=Running Press |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-7624-1698-1 |page=731 |author-link=Stephen Hawking |access-date=24 February 2016 }}{{Dead link|date=August 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>Primary source: {{harvtxt|Newton|2011|p=387}} wrote the following two "philosophizing rules" at the beginning of part&nbsp;3 of the [[Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica|Principia]] 1726 edition.
: Regula I. Causas rerum naturalium non-plures admitti debere, quam quæ & veræ sint & earum phænomenis explicandis sufficient.
: Regula II. Ideoque effectuum naturalium ejusdem generis eædem assignandæ sunt causæ, quatenus fieri potest.</ref>
In the sentence [[hypotheses non fingo]], Newton affirms the success of this approach.


[[Bertrand Russell]] offers a particular version of Occam's razor: "Whenever possible, substitute constructions out of known entities for inferences to unknown entities."<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logical-construction/ |title=Logical Constructions |publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University |year=2016 |access-date=29 March 2011 |archive-date=26 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210126031419/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logical-construction/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
For Ockham, the only truly necessary entity is [[God]]; everything else, the whole of creation, is radically contingent through and through. In short, Ockham does not accept the [[principle of sufficient reason|Principle of Sufficient Reason]].<ref name="ReferenceA"/>


Around 1960, [[Ray Solomonoff]] founded the [[Solomonoff's theory of inductive inference|theory of universal inductive inference]], the theory of prediction based on observations{{Snd}}for example, predicting the next symbol based upon a given series of symbols. The only assumption is that the environment follows some unknown but computable probability distribution. This theory is a mathematical formalization of Occam's razor.<ref name="ReferenceA">Induction: From Kolmogorov and Solomonoff to De Finetti and Back to Kolmogorov JJ McCall – Metroeconomica, 2004 – Wiley Online Library.</ref><ref name="ReferenceB">{{Cite journal |last=Soklakov |first=A. N. |year=2002 |title=Occam's Razor as a formal basis for a physical theory |journal=Foundations of Physics Letters |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=107–135 |arxiv=math-ph/0009007 |bibcode=2000math.ph...9007S |doi=10.1023/A:1020994407185|s2cid=14940740 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Rathmanner |first1=Samuel |last2=Hutter |first2=Marcus |author-link2=Marcus Hutter |year=2011 |title=A philosophical treatise of universal induction |journal=Entropy |volume=13 |issue=6 |pages=1076–1136 |arxiv=1105.5721 |bibcode=2011Entrp..13.1076R |doi=10.3390/e13061076|s2cid=2499910 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
==Justifications==
Beginning in the 20th century, [[epistemology|epistemological]] justifications based on [[Inductive reasoning|induction]], [[logic]], [[pragmatism]], and particularly [[probability theory]] have become more popular among philosophers. Some of these are explored below:


Another technical approach to Occam's razor is [[Ontological commitment#Ontological parsimony|ontological parsimony]].<ref name="Baker">{{Cite encyclopedia |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/simplicity/#OntPar |title=Simplicity |last=Baker |first=Alan |date=25 February 2010 |editor-last=Zalta |editor-first=Edward N. |encyclopedia=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2011 Edition) |access-date=6 April 2013 |archive-date=24 February 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224044741/https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/simplicity/#OntPar |url-status=live }}</ref> Parsimony means spareness and is also referred to as the Rule of Simplicity. This is considered a strong version of Occam's razor.<ref name="math.ucr.edu">{{Cite web |url=http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/occam.html |title=What is Occam's Razor? |website=math.ucr.edu |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170706234202/http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/General/occam.html |archive-date=6 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=shdlDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT30 |title=Everywhere The Soles of Your Feet Shall Tread |last=Stormy Dawn |date=17 July 2017 |publisher=Archway |isbn=9781480838024 |access-date=22 May 2017 |archive-date=28 October 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231028141247/https://books.google.com/books?id=shdlDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT30#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref> A variation used in medicine is called the "[[Zebra (medicine)|Zebra]]": a physician should reject an exotic medical diagnosis when a more commonplace explanation is more likely, derived from [[Theodore Woodward]]'s dictum "When you hear hoofbeats, think of horses not zebras".<ref>{{Cite book |title=Zebra Cards: An Aid to Obscure Diagnoses |last=Sotos |first=John G. |publisher=Mt. Vernon Book Systems |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-9818193-0-3 |location=Mt. Vernon, VA |orig-year=1991}}</ref>
===Aesthetic===
Prior to the 20th century, it was a commonly-held belief that nature itself was simple and that simpler hypotheses about nature were thus more likely to be true. This notion was deeply rooted in the aesthetic value simplicity holds for human thought and the justifications presented for it often drew from [[theology]]. [[Thomas Aquinas]] made this argument in the 13th century, writing, "If a thing can be done adequately by means of one, it is superfluous to do it by means of several; for we observe that nature does not employ two instruments [if] one suffices."<ref>Pegis 1945</ref>


[[Ernst Mach]] formulated the stronger version of Occam's razor into [[physics]], which he called the Principle of Economy stating: "Scientists must use the simplest means of arriving at their results and exclude everything not perceived by the senses."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Becher |first=Erich |year=1905 |title=The Philosophical Views of Ernst Mach |journal=The Philosophical Review |volume=14 |issue=5 |pages=535–562 |doi=10.2307/2177489 |jstor=2177489}}</ref>
===Empirical===
A scientist could test the Razor's claim that "simpler theories are, other things being equal, generally better than more complex ones" by comparing the track records of simple and comparatively complex theories. Occam's Razor would be [[Falsifiability|falsified]] if the more complex theories were more often correct. For example, Occam's Razor might be falsified if there was a positive correlation between (a) a theory's correctness and (b) the number of new assumptions it requires.


This principle goes back at least as far as Aristotle, who wrote "Nature operates in the shortest way possible."<ref name="math.ucr.edu" /> The idea of parsimony or simplicity in deciding between theories, though not the intent of the original expression of Occam's razor, has been assimilated into common culture as the widespread layman's formulation that "the simplest explanation is usually the correct one."<ref name="math.ucr.edu" />
In the history of explanations, this cannot be the case. Imagine the correct explanation to a phenomenon is found: that explanation was always competing with an ''infinite'' number of (relatively speaking) ''infinitely'' more complex alternatives. If this premise is granted, it amounts to there being necessarily a greater number of more complex but incorrect theories for any given correct theory. This suggests an empirically justified bias towards simplicity in a theory. In practice, competing scientific theories will usually each be making relatively few "new assumptions" anyway. In these cases, Occam's Razor still leaves science to use other methods to determine which theories make new assumptions that are more justified.


== Justifications ==
====Evidence of limitation====
Even if Occam's Razor is empirically justified (also see "Applications" section below), so too is the need to use other "theory selecting" methods in [[Science]]. For instance, in order to have even justified Occam's Razor, theoretically a scientist must first identify "the correct explanation" to gauge its complexity. Obviously this must be accomplished using ''other'' aspects of the [[Scientific method]] besides the Razor itself (or else we would be making a circular argument to support the Razor). Thus, to measure the Razor's (or any method's) ability to select between theories, we must be sure to use a different, reliable "theory selecting" method for corroboration.


=== Aesthetic ===
The role that Occam's Razor does play can be demonstrated if we consider that the aforementioned ''infinite number of complex theories'' could always add [[ad hoc hypothesis|''ad hoc'' hypotheses]] - justifications that allow them to remain potentially correct. In such cases, other empirical criteria like [[consilience]] can never eliminate the possibility that a more complex theory is actually correct (see e.g. Swinburne 1997 and Williams, Gareth T, 2008).
Prior to the 20th century, it was a commonly held belief that nature itself was simple and that simpler hypotheses about nature were thus more likely to be true. {{Clarify | text =This notion was deeply rooted in the aesthetic value that simplicity holds for human thought and the justifications presented for it often drew from [[theology]]. | date = February 2021 | reason = The example that follows doesn't connect with 'human thoughts' nor explicitly 'theology'.}} [[Thomas Aquinas]] made this argument in the 13th century, writing, "If a thing can be done adequately by means of one, it is superfluous to do it by means of several; for we observe that nature does not employ two instruments [if] one suffices."<ref>Pegis 1945.</ref>


Beginning in the 20th century, [[epistemology|epistemological]] justifications based on [[Inductive reasoning|induction]], [[logic]], [[pragmatism]], and especially [[probability theory]] have become more popular among philosophers.<ref name="Sober 2015 4"/>
Some argue that Occam's Razor is not a theory at all (in the classic sense of being an inference-driven model); rather, it may be a heuristic [[maxim (philosophy)|maxim]] for choosing ''among'' other theories and instead ''underlies'' induction.


=== Empirical ===
The pragmatist, however, may go on, like [[David Hume]] did on the topic induction, that there is no satisfying alternative to granting this premise. Though one may ''claim'' that Occam's Razor is invalid as a premise helping to regulate theories, putting this doubt into practice would mean doubting whether every step forward will result in [[locomotion]] or a [[nuclear explosion]]. In other words still: "What's the alternative?"
Occam's razor has gained strong empirical support in helping to converge on better theories (see [[#Uses|Uses]] section below for some examples).


In the related concept of [[overfitting]], excessively complex models are affected by [[statistical noise]] (a problem also known as the [[bias–variance tradeoff]]), whereas simpler models may capture the underlying structure better and may thus have better [[predictive inference|predictive]] performance. It is, however, often difficult to deduce which part of the data is noise (cf. [[model selection]], [[test set]], [[minimum description length]], [[Bayesian inference]], etc.).
===Other views===
====Karl Popper====
[[Karl Popper]] argues that a preference for simple theories need not appeal to practical or aesthetic considerations. Our preference for simplicity may be justified by its [[falsifiability]] criterion: We prefer simpler theories to more complex ones "because their empirical content is greater; and because they are better testable" (Popper 1992). The idea here is that a simple theory applies to more cases than a more complex one, and is thus more easily falsifiable. This is again comparing a simple theory to a more complex theory where both explain the data equally well.


====Elliott Sober====
==== Testing the razor ====
{{Original research section|reason=Author of this section cites very few reliable sources, and also consistently conflates simplicity with (logical) truth. Occam's razor is not built to differentiate true hypotheses from false ones.|date=January 2023}}
The philosopher of science [[Elliott Sober]] once argued along the same lines as Popper, tying simplicity with "informativeness": The simplest theory is the more informative one, in the sense that less information is required in order to answer one's questions (Sober 1975). He has since rejected this account of simplicity, purportedly because it fails to provide an [[epistemology|epistemic]] justification for simplicity. He now expresses views to the effect that simplicity considerations (and considerations of [[parsimony]] in particular) do not count unless they reflect something more fundamental. Philosophers, he suggests, may have made the error of hypostatizing simplicity (i.e. endowed it with a ''[[sui generis]]'' existence), when it has meaning only when embedded in a specific context (Sober 1992). If we fail to justify simplicity considerations on the basis of the context in which we make use of them, we may have no non-circular justification: "just as the question 'why be rational?' may have no non-circular answer, the same may be true of the question 'why should simplicity be considered in evaluating the plausibility of hypotheses?'" (Sober 2001)
The razor's statement that "other things being equal, simpler explanations are generally better than more complex ones" is amenable to empirical testing. Another interpretation of the razor's statement would be that "simpler hypotheses are generally better than the complex ones". The procedure to test the former interpretation would compare the track records of simple and comparatively complex explanations. If one accepts the first interpretation, the validity of Occam's razor as a tool would then have to be rejected if the more complex explanations were more often correct than the less complex ones (while the converse would lend support to its use). If the latter interpretation is accepted, the validity of Occam's razor as a tool could possibly be accepted if the simpler hypotheses led to correct conclusions more often than not.


Even if some increases in complexity are sometimes necessary, there still remains a justified general bias toward the simpler of two competing explanations. To understand why, consider that for each accepted explanation of a phenomenon, there is always an infinite number of possible, more complex, and ultimately incorrect, alternatives. This is so because one can always burden a failing explanation with an [[ad hoc hypothesis]]. Ad hoc hypotheses are justifications that prevent theories from being falsified.
==Applications==
===Science and the scientific method===
In science, Occam’s razor is used as a [[heuristic]] (rule of thumb) to guide scientists in the development of theoretical models rather than as an arbiter between published models.<ref name="fn_(100)"/><ref name="fn_(101)"/> In [[physics]], [[parsimony]] was an important [[heuristic]] in the formulation of [[special relativity]] by [[Albert Einstein]],<ref name="fn_(102)">Albert Einstein, Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content? Albert Einstein, Annalen der Physik 18: 639–641, (1905).</ref><ref name="fn_(103)">L. Nash, The Nature of the Natural Sciences, Boston: Little, Brown (1963).</ref> the development and application of the [[principle of least action]] by [[Pierre Louis Maupertuis]] and [[Leonhard Euler]],<ref name="fn_(104)">P.L.M. de Maupertuis, Mémoires de l'Académie Royale, 423 (1744).</ref> and the development of [[quantum mechanics]] by [[Ludwig Boltzmann]], [[Max Planck]], [[Werner Heisenberg]] and [[Louis de Broglie]].<ref name="fn_(101)"/><ref name="fn_(105)">L. de Broglie, Annales de Physique, 3/10, 22–128 (1925).</ref> In [[chemistry]], Occam’s razor is often an important [[heuristic]] when developing a model of a [[reaction mechanism]].<ref name="fn_(107)">R.A. Jackson, Mechanism: An Introduction to the Study of Organic Reactions, Clarendon, Oxford, 1972.</ref><ref name="fn_(108)">B.K. Carpenter, Determination of Organic Reaction Mechanism, Wiley-Interscience, New York, 1984.</ref> However, while it is useful as a heuristic in developing models of reaction mechanisms, it has been shown to fail as a criterion for selecting among published models.<ref name="fn_(101)"/>


[[File:Celtic Fairy Tales-1892-048-1.jpg|thumb|Possible explanations can become needlessly complex. It might be coherent, for instance, to add the involvement of [[leprechaun]]s to any explanation, but Occam's razor would prevent such additions unless they were necessary.]]
In the scientific method, parsimony is an [[epistemological]], [[metaphysical]] or [[heuristic]] preference, not an irrefutable principle of [[logic]], and certainly not a scientific result.<ref name="fn_(109)"/><ref name="fn_(110)"/><ref name="fn_(111)"/><ref name="fn_(112)">Eliot Sober, Let’s Razor Occam’s Razor, p. 73-93, from Dudley Knowles (ed.) Explanation and Its Limits, Cambridge University Press (1994).</ref> As a logical principle, Occam's razor would demand that scientists accept the simplest possible theoretical explanation for existing data. However, science has shown repeatedly that future data often supports more complex theories than existing data. Science tends to prefer the simplest explanation that is consistent with the data available at a given time, but history shows that these simplest explanations often yield to complexities as new data become available.<ref name="fn_(100)"/><ref name="fn_(110)"/> Science is open to the possibility that future experiments might support more complex theories than demanded by current data and is more interested in designing experiments to discriminate between competing theories than favoring one theory over another based merely on philosophical principles.<ref name="fn_(109)"/><ref name="fn_(110)"/><ref name="fn_(111)"/><ref name="fn_(112)"/>


For example, if a man, accused of breaking a vase, makes [[supernatural]] claims that [[leprechauns]] were responsible for the breakage, a simple explanation might be that the man did it, but ongoing ad hoc justifications (e.g., "... and that's not me breaking it on the film; they tampered with that, too") could successfully prevent complete disproof. This endless supply of elaborate competing explanations, called saving hypotheses, cannot be technically ruled out – except by using Occam's razor.<ref name="Stanovich2007">Stanovich, Keith E. (2007). ''How to Think Straight About Psychology''. Boston: Pearson Education, pp. 19–33.</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://skepdic.com/adhoc.html |title=ad hoc hypothesis - The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com |website=skepdic.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090427010136/http://www.skepdic.com/adhoc.html |archive-date=27 April 2009}}</ref><ref>Swinburne 1997 and Williams, Gareth T, 2008.</ref>
As a methodological principle, the demand for simplicity suggested by Occam’s razor cannot be generally sustained. Occam’s razor cannot help toward a rational decision between competing explanations of the same empirical facts. One problem in formulating an explicit general principle is that complexity and simplicity are perspective notions whose meaning depends on the context of application and the user’s prior understanding. In the absence of an objective criterion for simplicity and complexity, Occam’s razor itself does not support an objective [[epistemology]].<ref name="fn_(111)"/>


Any more complex theory might still possibly be true. A study of the predictive validity of Occam's razor found 32 published papers that included 97 comparisons of economic forecasts from simple and complex forecasting methods. None of the papers provided a balance of evidence that complexity of method improved forecast accuracy. In the 25 papers with quantitative comparisons, complexity increased forecast errors by an average of 27 percent.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Green |first1=K. C. |last2=Armstrong |first2=J. S. |year=2015 |title=Simple versus complex forecasting: The evidence |url=https://repository.upenn.edu/marketing_papers/366 |journal=Journal of Business Research |volume=68 |issue=8 |pages=1678–1685 |doi=10.1016/j.jbusres.2015.03.026 |access-date=22 January 2019 |archive-date=8 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200608134337/https://repository.upenn.edu/marketing_papers/366/ |url-status=live }}{{subscription required}}</ref>
The problem of deciding between competing explanations for empirical facts cannot be solved by formal tools. Simplicity principles can be useful heuristics in formulating hypotheses, but they do not make a contribution to the selection of theories. A theory that is compatible with one person’s world view will be considered simple, clear, logical, and evident, whereas what is contrary to that world view will quickly be rejected as an overly complex explanation with senseless additional hypotheses. Occam’s razor, in this way, becomes a “mirror of prejudice.”<ref name="fn_(111)"/>


=== Practical considerations and pragmatism ===
Most of the time, Occam’s razor is a conservative tool, cutting out complicated constructions and assuring that hypotheses are grounded in the science of the day, thus yielding ‘normal’ science: models of explanation and prediction. There are, however, notable exceptions where Occam’s razor turns a conservative scientist into a reluctant revolutionary. For example, [[Max Planck]] interpolated between the [[Wien approximation|Wien]] and [[Rayleigh–Jeans law|Jeans]] radiation laws used an Occam’s razor logic to formulate the quantum hypothesis, and even resisting that hypothesis as it became more obvious that it was correct.<ref name="fn_(101)"/>
{{See also|Pragmatism|Problem of induction}}


=== Mathematical ===
However, on many occasions Occam's razor has stifled or delayed scientific progress.<ref name="fn_(111)"/> For example, appeals to simplicity were used to deny the phenomena of meteorites, ball lightning, continental drift, and reverse transcriptase. It originally rejected [[DNA]] as the carrier of genetic information in favor of proteins, since proteins provided the simpler explanation. Theories that reach far beyond the available data are rare, but [[general relativity]] provides one example.
{{Main| Akaike information criterion}}


One justification of Occam's razor is a direct result of basic [[probability theory]]. By definition, all assumptions introduce possibilities for error; if an assumption does not improve the accuracy of a theory, its only effect is to increase the probability that the overall theory is wrong.
In hindsight, one can argue that it is simpler to consider [[DNA]] as the carrier of genetic information, because it uses a smaller number of building blocks (four nitrogenous bases). However, during the time that proteins were the favored genetic medium, it seemed like a more complex hypothesis to confer genetic information in DNA rather than proteins.


There have also been other attempts to derive Occam's razor from probability theory, including notable attempts made by [[Harold Jeffreys]] and [[Edwin Thompson Jaynes|E. T. Jaynes]]. The probabilistic (Bayesian) basis for Occam's razor is elaborated by [[David J. C. MacKay]] in chapter 28 of his book ''Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms'',<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/itprnn/book.pdf |title=Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms |last=MacKay |first=David J. C. |year=2003 |bibcode=2003itil.book.....M |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120915043535/http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/itprnn/book.pdf |archive-date=15 September 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref> where he emphasizes that a prior bias in favor of simpler models is not required.
One can also argue (also in hindsight) for atomic building blocks for matter, because it provides a simpler explanation for the observed reversibility of both mixing and chemical reactions as simple separation and re-arrangements of the atomic building blocks. However, at the time, the [[atomic theory]] was considered more complex because it inferred the existence of invisible particles which had not been directly detected. [[Ernst Mach]] and the logical positivists rejected the [[atomic theory]] of [[John Dalton]], until the reality of atoms was more evident in [[Brownian motion]], as explained by [[Albert Einstein]].<ref>Ernst Mach, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ernst-mach/</ref>


[[William H. Jefferys]] and [[James Berger (statistician)|James O. Berger]] (1991) generalize and quantify the original formulation's "assumptions" concept as the degree to which a proposition is unnecessarily accommodating to possible observable data.<ref name="Jefferys">{{Cite journal |last1=Jefferys |first1=William H. |last2=Berger |first2=James O. |year=1991 |title=Ockham's Razor and Bayesian Statistics |url=http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/papers/ockham.pdf |url-status=live |journal=[[American Scientist]] |volume=80 |issue=1 |pages=64–72 |jstor=29774559 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050304065538/http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/papers/ockham.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2005}} (preprint available as "Sharpening Occam's Razor on a Bayesian Strop").</ref> They state, "A hypothesis with fewer adjustable parameters will automatically have an enhanced posterior probability, due to the fact that the predictions it makes are sharp."<ref name="Jefferys" /> The use of "sharp" here is not only a tongue-in-cheek reference to the idea of a razor, but also indicates that such predictions are more [[Accuracy and precision|accurate]] than competing predictions. The model they propose balances the precision of a theory's predictions against their sharpness, preferring theories that sharply make correct predictions over theories that accommodate a wide range of other possible results. This, again, reflects the mathematical relationship between key concepts in [[Bayesian inference]] (namely [[marginal probability]], [[conditional probability]], and [[posterior probability]]).
In the same way, hindsight argues that postulating the [[Luminiferous aether|aether]] is more complex than transmission of light through a [[vacuum]]. However, at the time, all known waves propagated through a physical medium, and it seemed simpler to postulate the existence of a medium rather than theorize about wave propagation without a medium. Likewise, Newton's idea of light particles seemed simpler than Young's idea of waves, so many favored it; however in this case, as it turned out, neither the wave- nor the particle-explanation alone suffices, since light behaves like waves as well as like particles ([[wave–particle duality]]).


The [[bias–variance tradeoff]] is a framework that incorporates the Occam's razor principle in its balance between overfitting (associated with lower bias but higher variance) and underfitting (associated with lower variance but higher bias).<ref>{{Cite book |title=An Introduction to Statistical Learning|last1=James |first1=Gareth |last2=Witten |first2 = Daniela |last3 = Hastie |first3 = Trevor|last4 = Tibshirani |first4 = Robert |display-authors = 1| date=2013 |publisher=springer |isbn=9781461471370 |pages=105, 203–204}}</ref>
Three axioms presupposed by the scientific method are realism (the existence of objective reality), the existence of natural laws, and the constancy of natural law. Rather than depend on provability of these axioms, science depends on the fact that they have not been objectively falsified. Occam’s razor and [[parsimony]] support, but do not prove these general axioms of science. The general principle of science is that theories (or models) of natural law must be consistent with repeatable experimental observations. This ultimate arbiter (selection criterion) rests upon the axioms mentioned above.<ref name="fn_(110)"/>


=== Other philosophers ===
If multiple models of natural law make exactly the same testable predictions, they are equivalent and there is no need for parsimony to choose one that is preferred. For example, Newtonian, Hamiltonian, and Lagrangian classical mechanics are equivalent. Physicists have no interest in using Occam’s razor to say the other two are wrong. Likewise, there is no demand for simplicity principles to arbitrate between wave and matrix formulations of quantum mechanics. Science often does not demand arbitration or selection criteria between models which make the same testable predictions.<ref name="fn_(110)"/>


===Biology===
==== Karl Popper ====
[[Karl Popper]] argues that a preference for simple theories need not appeal to practical or aesthetic considerations. Our preference for simplicity may be justified by its [[falsifiability]] criterion: we prefer simpler theories to more complex ones "because their empirical content is greater; and because they are better testable".<ref>{{cite book |last=Popper |first=Karl |author-link=Karl Popper |orig-year=1934 |year=1992 |title=Logik der Forschung |trans-title=The Logic of Scientific Discovery |edition=2nd |location=London |publisher=Routledge |pages=121–132 |isbn=978-84-309-0711-3 }}</ref> The idea here is that a simple theory applies to more cases than a more complex one, and is thus more easily falsifiable. This is again comparing a simple theory to a more complex theory where both explain the data equally well.
Biologists or philosophers of biology use Occam's razor in either of two contexts both in [[evolution|evolutionary biology]]: the units of selection controversy and [[systematics]]. [[George C. Williams]] in his book ''[[Adaptation and Natural Selection]]'' (1966) argues that the best way to explain [[altruism]] among animals is based on low level (i.e. individual) selection as opposed to high level group selection. Altruism is defined as behavior that is beneficial to the group but not to the individual, and group selection is thought by some to be the evolutionary mechanism that selects for altruistic traits. Others posit individual selection as the mechanism which explains altruism solely in terms of the behaviors of individual organisms acting in their own self interest without regard to the group. The basis for Williams's contention is that of the two, individual selection is the more parsimonious theory. In doing so he is invoking a variant of Occam's razor known as [[Morgan's Canon|Lloyd Morgan's Canon]]: "In no case is an animal activity to be interpreted in terms of higher psychological processes, if it can be fairly interpreted in terms of processes which stand lower in the scale of psychological evolution and development" (Morgan 1903).


==== Elliott Sober ====
However, more recent biological analyses, such as [[Richard Dawkins]]'s ''[[The Selfish Gene]]'', have contended that Williams's view is not the simplest and most basic. Dawkins argues the way evolution works is that the genes that are propagated in most copies will end up determining the development of that particular species, i.e., natural selection turns out to select specific genes, and this is really the fundamental underlying principle, that automatically gives individual and group selection as [[emergent]] features of evolution.
The philosopher of science [[Elliott Sober]] once argued along the same lines as Popper, tying simplicity with "informativeness": The simplest theory is the more informative, in the sense that it requires less information to a question.<ref name="Sober975">{{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/simplicity0000sobe |title=Simplicity |last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=[[Clarendon Press]] |year=1975 |isbn=978-0-19-824407-3 |location=Oxford |author-link=Elliott Sober |url-access=registration}}</ref> He has since rejected this account of simplicity, purportedly because it fails to provide an [[epistemology|epistemic]] justification for simplicity. He now believes that simplicity considerations (and considerations of parsimony in particular) do not count unless they reflect something more fundamental. Philosophers, he suggests, may have made the error of hypostatizing simplicity (i.e., endowed it with a ''[[sui generis]]'' existence), when it has meaning only when embedded in a specific context (Sober 1992). If we fail to justify simplicity considerations on the basis of the context in which we use them, we may have no non-circular justification: "Just as the question 'why be rational?' may have no non-circular answer, the same may be true of the question 'why should simplicity be considered in evaluating the plausibility of hypotheses?{{'"}}<ref name="Sober2002">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-YdbBN-O-JAC&q=zellner+simplicity |title=Simplicity, Inference and Modeling: Keeping it Sophisticatedly Simple |last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-521-80361-8 |editor-last=Zellner |editor-first=Arnold |location=Cambridge, U.K. |pages=13–31 |chapter=What is the Problem of Simplicity? |access-date=4 August 2012 |editor-last2=Keuzenkamp |editor-first2=Hugo A. |editor-link2=Hugo A. Keuzenkamp |editor-last3=McAleer |editor-first3=Michael |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J_CDXu24qZUC&q=sober+rival+hypotheses&pg=RA1-PA13 |archive-date=28 October 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231028141247/https://books.google.com/books?id=-YdbBN-O-JAC&q=zellner+simplicity#v=snippet&q=zellner%20simplicity&f=false |url-status=live }} [https://web.archive.org/web/20060901082031/http://philosophy.wisc.edu/sober/TILBURG.pdf Paper as PDF.]</ref>


==== Richard Swinburne ====
[[Zoology]] provides an example. [[Muskox]]en, when threatened by [[Gray Wolf|wolves]], will form a circle with the males on the outside and the females and young on the inside. This as an example of a behavior by the males that seems to be [[altruistic]]. The behavior is disadvantageous to them individually but beneficial to the group as a whole and was thus seen by some to support the group selection theory.


[[Richard Swinburne]] argues for simplicity on logical grounds:
However, a much better explanation immediately offers itself once one considers that natural selection works on genes. If the male musk ox runs off, leaving his offspring to the wolves, his genes will not be propagated. If however he takes up the fight his genes will live on in his offspring. And thus the "stay-and-fight" gene prevails. This is an example of [[kin selection]]. An underlying general principle thus offers a much simpler explanation, without retreating to special principles as group selection.


{{blockquote|... the simplest hypothesis proposed as an explanation of phenomena is more likely to be the true one than is any other available hypothesis, that its predictions are more likely to be true than those of any other available hypothesis, and that it is an ultimate ''a priori'' epistemic principle that simplicity is evidence for truth.|Swinburne 1997}}
[[Systematics]] is the branch of [[biology]] that attempts to establish genealogical relationships among organisms. It is also concerned with their classification. There are three primary camps in systematics; cladists, pheneticists, and evolutionary taxonomists. The cladists hold that [[genealogy]] alone should determine classification and pheneticists contend that similarity over propinquity of descent is the determining criterion while evolutionary taxonomists claim that both genealogy and similarity count in classification.


According to Swinburne, since our choice of theory cannot be determined by data (see [[Underdetermination]] and [[Duhem–Quine thesis]]), we must rely on some criterion to determine which theory to use. Since it is absurd to have no logical method for settling on one hypothesis amongst an infinite number of equally data-compliant hypotheses, we should choose the simplest theory: "Either science is irrational [in the way it judges theories and predictions probable] or the principle of simplicity is a fundamental synthetic a priori truth."<ref>Swinburne, Richard (1997). Simplicity as Evidence for Truth. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Marquette University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-87462-164-8}}.</ref>
It is among the cladists that Occam's razor is to be found, although their term for it is cladistic parsimony. Cladistic parsimony (or [[maximum parsimony]]) is a method of phylogenetic inference in the construction of cladograms. [[Cladistics|Cladograms]] are branching, tree-like structures used to represent lines of descent based on one or more evolutionary change(s). Cladistic parsimony is used to support the hypothesis(es) that require the fewest evolutionary changes. For some types of tree, it will consistently produce the wrong results regardless of how much data is collected (this is called [[long branch attraction]]). For a full treatment of cladistic parsimony, see Elliott Sober's ''Reconstructing the Past: Parsimony, Evolution, and Inference'' (1988). For a discussion of both uses of Occam's razor in Biology see Elliott Sober's article ''Let's Razor Ockham's Razor'' (1990).


==== Ludwig Wittgenstein ====
Other methods for inferring evolutionary relationships use parsimony in a more traditional way. [[Likelihood]] methods for phylogeny use parsimony as they do for all likelihood tests, with hypotheses requiring few differing parameters (i.e., numbers of different rates of character change or different frequencies of character state transitions) being treated as null hypotheses relative to hypotheses requiring many differing parameters. Thus, complex hypotheses must predict data much better than do simple hypotheses before researchers reject the simple hypotheses. Recent advances employ [[Information Theory|information theory]], a close cousin of likelihood, which uses Occam's Razor in the same way.
From the ''[[Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus]]'':
* 3.328 "If a sign is not necessary then it is meaningless. That is the meaning of Occam's Razor."
: (If everything in the symbolism works as though a sign had meaning, then it has meaning.)
* 4.04 "In the proposition, there must be exactly as many things distinguishable as there are in the state of affairs, which it represents. They must both possess the same logical (mathematical) multiplicity (cf. Hertz's Mechanics, on Dynamic Models)."
* 5.47321 "Occam's Razor is, of course, not an arbitrary rule nor one justified by its practical success. It simply says that unnecessary elements in a symbolism mean nothing. Signs which serve one purpose are logically equivalent; signs which serve no purpose are logically meaningless."
and on the related concept of "simplicity":
* 6.363 "The procedure of induction consists in accepting as true the simplest law that can be reconciled with our experiences."


== Uses ==
[[Francis Crick]] has commented on potential limitations of Occam's razor in biology. He advances the argument that because biological systems are the products of (an on-going) natural selection, the mechanisms are not necessarily optimal in an obvious sense. He cautions: "''While Ockham's razor is a useful tool in the physical sciences, it can be a very dangerous implement in biology. It is thus very rash to use simplicity and elegance as a guide in biological research.''" <ref>Crick 1988, p.146.</ref>
{{original research |section|date=May 2021}}


=== Science and the scientific method ===
===Medicine===
[[File:Heliocentric.jpg|thumb|250px|right|[[Andreas Cellarius]]'s illustration of the Copernican system, from the ''[[Harmonia Macrocosmica]]'' (1660). Future positions of the sun, moon and other solar system bodies can be calculated using a [[Geocentrism|geocentric]] model (the earth is at the centre) or using a [[Heliocentrism#Modern science|heliocentric model]] (the sun is at the centre). Both work, but the geocentric model requires a much more complex system of calculations than the heliocentric model. This was pointed out in a preface to [[Copernicus]]'s first edition of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]''.]]
When discussing Occam's razor in contemporary [[medicine]], doctors and philosophers of medicine speak of diagnostic parsimony. Diagnostic parsimony advocates that when diagnosing a given injury, ailment, illness, or disease a doctor should strive to look for the fewest possible causes that will account for all the symptoms. This philosophy is one of several demonstrated in the popular medical [[adage]] "[[Zebra (medical)|when you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras]]". While diagnostic parsimony might often be beneficial, credence should also be given to the counter-argument modernly known as [[Hickam's dictum]], which succinctly states that "patients can have as many diseases as they damn well please". It is often statistically more likely that a patient has several common diseases, rather than having a single rarer disease which explains their myriad symptoms. Also, independently of statistical likelihood, some patients do in fact turn out to have multiple diseases, which by common sense nullifies the approach of insisting to explain any given collection of symptoms with one disease. These misgivings emerge from simple probability theory—which is already taken into account in many modern variations of the razor—and from the fact that the [[loss function]] is much greater in medicine than in most of general science. Because misdiagnosis can result in the loss of a person's health and potentially life, it is considered better to test and pursue all reasonable theories even if there is some theory that appears the most likely.
In [[science]], Occam's razor is used as a [[heuristic]] to guide scientists in developing theoretical models rather than as an arbiter between published models.<ref name="fn_(100)" /><ref name="fn_(101)" /> In [[physics]], parsimony was an important heuristic in the development and application of the [[principle of least action]] by [[Pierre Louis Maupertuis]] and [[Leonhard Euler]],<ref name="fn_(104)">{{Cite book |title=Mémoires de l'Académie Royale |last=de Maupertuis |first=P. L. M. |year=1744 |page=423 |language=fr}}</ref> in [[Albert Einstein]]'s formulation of [[special relativity]],<ref name="fn_(102)">{{Cite journal |last=Einstein |first=Albert |author-link=Albert Einstein |year=1905 |title=Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content? |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1424057 |journal=Annalen der Physik |language=de |issue=18 |pages=639–41 |doi=10.1002/andp.19053231314 |bibcode=1905AnP...323..639E |volume=323 |doi-access=free |access-date=21 October 2019 |archive-date=21 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191021050723/https://zenodo.org/record/1424057 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="fn_(103)">L. Nash, The Nature of the Natural Sciences, Boston: Little, Brown (1963).</ref> and in the development of [[quantum mechanics]] by [[Max Planck]], [[Werner Heisenberg]] and [[Louis de Broglie]].<ref name="fn_(101)" /><ref name="fn_(105)">{{Cite book |title=Annales de Physique |last=de Broglie |first=L. |year=1925 |pages=22–128 |language=fr |issue=3/10}}</ref>


In [[chemistry]], Occam's razor is often an important heuristic when developing a model of a [[reaction mechanism]].<ref name="fn_(107)">RA Jackson, Mechanism: An Introduction to the Study of Organic Reactions, Clarendon, Oxford, 1972.</ref><ref name="fn_(108)">Carpenter, B. K. (1984). ''Determination of Organic Reaction Mechanism'', New York: Wiley-Interscience.</ref> Although it is useful as a heuristic in developing models of reaction mechanisms, it has been shown to fail as a criterion for selecting among some selected published models.<ref name="fn_(101)" /> In this context, Einstein himself expressed caution when he formulated Einstein's [[Constraint counting|Constraint]]: "It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Einstein |first=Albert |date=1934 |title=On the Method of Theoretical Physics |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/184387 |journal=Philosophy of Science |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=165 [163–169] |doi=10.1086/286316 |jstor=184387 |s2cid=44787169 |access-date=22 January 2023 |archive-date=22 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230122233537/https://www.jstor.org/stable/184387 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Mettenheim |first=Christoph von |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hLSR2or-bGAC |title=Popper Versus Einstein: On the Philosophical Foundations of Physics |date=1998 |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |isbn=978-3-16-146910-7 |page=34 |language=en |access-date=22 January 2023 |archive-date=22 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230122233538/https://books.google.com/books?id=hLSR2or-bGAC |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Geis |first1=Gilbert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdbQMywnrdwC&dq=%22the+supreme+goal+of+all+theory+is+to+make+the+irreducible+basic+elements+as+simple+and+as+few+as+possible+without+having+to+surrender+the+adequate+representation+of+a+single+datum+of%22&pg=PA39 |title=Crimes of the Century: From Leopold and Loeb to O.J. Simpson |last2=Geis |first2=Professor Emeritus of Criminology Law and & Society Gilbert |last3=Bienen |first3=Leigh B. |date=1998 |publisher=UPNE |isbn=978-1-55553-360-1 |page=39 |language=en |access-date=10 February 2023 |archive-date=5 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405182025/https://books.google.com/books?id=xdbQMywnrdwC&dq=%22the+supreme+goal+of+all+theory+is+to+make+the+irreducible+basic+elements+as+simple+and+as+few+as+possible+without+having+to+surrender+the+adequate+representation+of+a+single+datum+of%22&pg=PA39 |url-status=live }}</ref> An often-quoted version of this constraint (which cannot be verified as posited by Einstein himself)<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://quoteinvestigator.com/2011/05/13/einstein-simple/ |title=Everything Should Be Made as Simple as Possible, But Not Simpler |date=13 May 2011 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120529075018/http://quoteinvestigator.com/2011/05/13/einstein-simple/ |archive-date=29 May 2012}}</ref> reduces this to "Everything should be kept as simple as possible, but not simpler."
Diagnostic parsimony and the counter-balance it finds in Hickam's dictum have very important implications in medical practice. Any set of symptoms could be indicative of a range of possible diseases and disease combinations; though at no point is a diagnosis rejected or accepted just on the basis of one disease appearing more likely than another, the continuous flow of hypothesis formulation, testing and modification benefits greatly from estimates regarding which diseases (or sets of diseases) are relatively more likely to be responsible for a set of symptoms, given the patient's environment, habits, medical history and so on. For example, if a hypothetical patient's immediately apparent symptoms include [[fatigue (medical)|fatigue]] and [[cirrhosis]] and they test negative for [[Hepatitis C]], their doctor might formulate a working hypothesis that the cirrhosis was caused by their [[alcoholism|drinking problem]], and then seek symptoms and perform tests to formulate and rule out hypotheses as to what has been causing the fatigue; but if the doctor were to further discover that the patient's breath inexplicably smells of garlic and they are suffering from [[pulmonary edema]], they might decide to test for the relatively rare condition of [[Selenium#Toxicity|Selenium poisoning]].


In the [[scientific method]], Occam's razor is not considered an irrefutable principle of [[logic]] or a scientific result; the preference for simplicity in the scientific method is based on the [[falsifiability]] criterion. For each accepted explanation of a phenomenon, there may be an extremely large, perhaps even incomprehensible, number of possible and more complex alternatives. Since failing explanations can always be burdened with [[Ad hoc hypothesis|''ad hoc'' hypotheses]] to prevent them from being falsified, simpler theories are preferable to more complex ones because they tend to be more [[test method|testable]].<ref name="fn_(109)">{{Cite book |last=Alan Baker |title=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |publisher=Stanford University |year=2010 |location=California |chapter=Simplicity |chapter-url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/simplicity/ |orig-year=2004 |access-date=22 January 2005 |archive-date=26 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140326180129/http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/simplicity/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="fn_(110)">{{Cite journal |last1=Courtney |first1=A. |last2=Courtney |first2=M. |year=2008 |title=Comments Regarding 'On the Nature of Science' |journal=Physics in Canada |volume=64 |issue=3 |pages=7–8 |arxiv=0812.4932 |bibcode=2008arXiv0812.4932C}}</ref><ref name="fn_(114)">{{Cite book |last=Sober |first=Elliott |title=Explanation and Its Limits |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1994 |editor-last=Knowles |editor-first=Dudley |pages=73–93 |chapter=Let's Razor Occam's Razor}}</ref> As a logical principle, Occam's razor would demand that scientists accept the simplest possible theoretical explanation for existing data. However, science has shown repeatedly that future data often support more complex theories than do existing data. Science prefers the simplest explanation that is consistent with the data available at a given time, but the simplest explanation may be ruled out as new data become available.<ref name="fn_(100)" /><ref name="fn_(110)" /> That is, science is open to the possibility that future experiments might support more complex theories than demanded by current data and is more interested in designing experiments to discriminate between competing theories than favoring one theory over another based merely on philosophical principles.<ref name="fn_(109)" /><ref name="fn_(110)" /><ref name="fn_(114)" />
Prior to effective anti-retroviral therapy for [[HIV]] it was frequently stated that the most obvious implication of Occam's razor, that of cutting down the number of postulated diseases to a minimum, does not apply to patients with [[AIDS]], as they frequently did have multiple infectious processes going on at the same time. While the probability of multiple diseases being higher certainly reduces the degree to which this kind of analysis is useful, it does not go all the way to invalidating it altogether; even in such a patient, it would make more sense to first test a theory postulating three diseases to be the cause of the symptoms than a theory postulating seven.


When scientists use the idea of parsimony, it has meaning only in a very specific context of inquiry. Several background assumptions are required for parsimony to connect with plausibility in a particular research problem.{{Clarify | date = February 2021 | reason = This sentence is so vague/abstract that it seems to add very little to the discussion. For example, try dropping it, there doesn't seem to be much lost.}} The reasonableness of parsimony in one research context may have nothing to do with its reasonableness in another. It is a mistake to think that there is a single global principle that spans diverse subject matter.<ref name="fn_(114)" />
===Religion===


It has been suggested that Occam's razor is a widely accepted example of extraevidential consideration, even though it is entirely a metaphysical assumption. Most of the time, however, Occam's razor is a conservative tool, cutting out "crazy, complicated constructions" and assuring "that hypotheses are grounded in the science of the day", thus yielding "normal" science: models of explanation and prediction.<ref name="fn_(101)" /> There are, however, notable exceptions where Occam's razor turns a conservative scientist into a reluctant revolutionary. For example, [[Max Planck]] interpolated between the [[Wien approximation|Wien]] and [[Rayleigh–Jeans law|Jeans]] radiation laws and used Occam's razor logic to formulate the quantum hypothesis, even resisting that hypothesis as it became more obvious that it was correct.<ref name="fn_(101)" />
In the [[philosophy of religion]], Occam's razor is sometimes applied to the [[existence of God]]; if the concept of God does not help to explain the universe, it is argued, God is irrelevant and should be cut away (Schmitt 2005). It is argued to imply that, in the absence of compelling reasons to believe in God, disbelief should be preferred. Such arguments are based on the assertion that belief in God requires more complex assumptions to explain the universe than non-belief.


Appeals to simplicity were used to argue against the phenomena of meteorites, [[ball lightning]], [[continental drift]], and [[reverse transcriptase]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Rabinowitz |first1=Matthew |last2=Myers |first2=Lance |last3=Banjevic |first3=Milena |last4=Chan |first4=Albert |last5=Sweetkind-Singer |first5=Joshua |last6=Haberer |first6=Jessica |last7=McCann |first7=Kelly |last8=Wolkowicz |first8=Roland |date=1 March 2006 |title=Accurate prediction of HIV-1 drug response from the reverse transcriptase and protease amino acid sequences using sparse models created by convex optimization |journal=Bioinformatics |language=en |volume=22 |issue=5 |pages=541–549 |doi=10.1093/bioinformatics/btk011 |pmid=16368772|doi-access=free }}</ref> One can argue for atomic building blocks for matter, because it provides a simpler explanation for the observed reversibility of both {{Clarify | text = mixing | date = February 2021 | reason = Mixing of what? }} and chemical reactions as simple separation and rearrangements of atomic building blocks. At the time, however, the [[atomic theory]] was considered more complex because it implied the existence of invisible particles that had not been directly detected. [[Ernst Mach]] and the logical positivists rejected [[John Dalton]]'s [[atomic theory]] until the reality of atoms was more evident in [[Brownian motion]], as shown by [[Albert Einstein]].<ref name="Pojman2009">{{Cite book |title=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |last=Paul Pojman |publisher=Stanford University |year=2009 |location=California |chapter=Ernst Mach |chapter-url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ernst-mach/ |access-date=4 October 2009 |archive-date=11 November 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201111231039/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ernst-mach/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
Rather than argue for the necessity of God, some theists consider their belief to be based on grounds independent of, or prior to, reason, making Occam's razor irrelevant. This was the stance of [[Søren Kierkegaard]], who viewed belief in God as a [[leap of faith]] which sometimes directly opposed reason (McDonald 2005); this is also the same basic view of [[Gordon Clark|Clarkian]] [[Presuppositional apologetics]].


In the same way, postulating the [[Luminiferous aether|aether]] is more complex than transmission of light through a [[vacuum]]. At the time, however, all known waves propagated through a physical medium, and it seemed simpler to postulate the existence of a medium than to theorize about wave propagation without a medium. Likewise, [[Isaac Newton]]'s idea of light particles seemed simpler than [[Christiaan Huygens]]'s idea of waves, so many favored it. In this case, as it turned out, neither the wave—nor the particle—explanation alone suffices, as [[wave–particle duality|light behaves like waves and like particles]].
Ockham considered some Christian sources to be valid sources of factual data, equal to both logic and sense perception. He wrote, "No plurality should be assumed unless it can be proved (a) by reason, or (b) by experience, or (c) by some infallible authority"; referring in the last clause "to the Bible, the Saints and certain pronouncements of the Church" (Hoffmann 1997).


Three axioms presupposed by the scientific method are realism (the existence of objective reality), the existence of natural laws, and the constancy of natural law. Rather than depend on provability of these axioms, science depends on the fact that they have not been objectively falsified. Occam's razor and parsimony support, but do not prove, these axioms of science. The general principle of science is that theories (or models) of natural law must be consistent with repeatable experimental observations. This ultimate arbiter (selection criterion) rests upon the axioms mentioned above.<ref name="fn_(110)" />
===Philosophy of mind===
Probably the first person to make use of the principle was Ockham himself. He writes "The source of many errors in philosophy is the claim that a distinct signified thing always corresponds to a distinct word in such a way that there are as many distinct entities being signified as there are distinct names or words doing the signifying." (''Summula Philosophiae Naturalis III'', chap. 7, see also ''Summa Totus Logicae'' Bk I, C.51). We are apt to suppose that a word like "paternity" signifies some "distinct entity", because we suppose that each distinct word signifies a distinct entity. This leads to all sorts of absurdities, such as "a column is to the right by to-the-rightness", "God is creating by creation, is good by goodness, is just by justice, is powerful by power", "an accident inheres by inherence", "a subject is subjected by subjection", "a suitable thing is suitable by suitability", "a chimera is nothing by nothingness", "a blind thing is blind by blindness", " a body is mobile by mobility". We should say instead that a man is a father because he has a son (Summa C.51).


If multiple models of natural law make exactly the same testable predictions, they are equivalent and there is no need for parsimony to choose a preferred one. For example, [[Newtonian mechanics|Newtonian]], [[Hamiltonian mechanics|Hamiltonian]] and [[Lagrangian mechanics|Lagrangian]] classical mechanics are equivalent. Physicists have no interest in using Occam's razor to say the other two are wrong. Likewise, there is no demand for simplicity principles to arbitrate between wave and matrix formulations of quantum mechanics. Science often does not demand arbitration or selection criteria between models that make the same testable predictions.<ref name="fn_(110)" />
Another application of the principle is to be found in the work of [[George Berkeley]] (1685–1753). Berkeley was an idealist who believed that all of reality could be explained in terms of the mind alone. He famously invoked Occam's razor against [[Idealism]]'s metaphysical competitor, [[materialism]], claiming that matter was not required by his metaphysic and was thus eliminable.


=== Biology ===
In the 20th century Philosophy of Mind, Occam's razor found a champion in [[J. J. C. Smart]], who in his article "Sensations and Brain Processes" (1959) claimed Occam's razor as the basis for his preference of the mind-brain identity theory over [[Mind-body dualism|mind body dualism]]. Dualists claim that there are two kinds of substances in the universe: physical (including the body) and mental, which is nonphysical. In contrast identity theorists claim that everything is physical, including consciousness, and that there is nothing nonphysical. The basis for the materialist claim is that of the two competing theories, dualism and mind-brain identity, the identity theory is the simpler since it commits to fewer entities. Smart was criticized for his use of the razor and ultimately retracted his advocacy of it in this context.
{{Citation style|date=January 2023|section}}
Biologists or philosophers of biology use Occam's razor in either of two contexts both in [[evolution|evolutionary biology]]: the units of selection controversy and [[systematics]]. [[George C. Williams (biologist)|George C. Williams]] in his book ''[[Adaptation and Natural Selection]]'' (1966) argues that the best way to explain [[altruism]] among animals is based on low-level (i.e., individual) selection as opposed to high-level group selection. Altruism is defined by some evolutionary biologists (e.g., R. Alexander, 1987; W. D. Hamilton, 1964) as behavior that is beneficial to others (or to the group) at a cost to the individual, and many posit individual selection as the mechanism that explains altruism solely in terms of the behaviors of individual organisms acting in their own self-interest (or in the interest of their genes, via kin selection). Williams was arguing against the perspective of others who propose selection at the level of the group as an evolutionary mechanism that selects for altruistic traits (e.g., D. S. Wilson & E. O. Wilson, 2007). The basis for Williams's contention is that of the two, individual selection is the more parsimonious theory. In doing so he is invoking a variant of Occam's razor known as [[Morgan's Canon]]: "In no case is an animal activity to be interpreted in terms of higher psychological processes, if it can be fairly interpreted in terms of processes which stand lower in the scale of psychological evolution and development." (Morgan 1903).


However, more recent biological analyses, such as [[Richard Dawkins]]'s ''[[The Selfish Gene]]'', have contended that Morgan's Canon is not the simplest and most basic explanation. Dawkins argues the way evolution works is that the genes propagated in most copies end up determining the development of that particular species, i.e., natural selection turns out to select specific genes, and this is really the fundamental underlying principle that automatically gives individual and group selection as [[Emergent evolution|emergent]] features of evolution.
[[Paul Churchland]] (1984) cites Occam's razor as the first line of attack against dualism, but admits that by itself it is inconclusive. The deciding factor for Churchland is the greater explanatory prowess of a materialist position in the Philosophy of Mind as informed by findings in neurobiology.


[[Zoology]] provides an example. [[Muskox]]en, when threatened by [[Gray wolf|wolves]], form a circle with the males on the outside and the females and young on the inside. This is an example of a behavior by the males that seems to be altruistic. The behavior is disadvantageous to them individually but beneficial to the group as a whole; thus, it was seen by some to support the group selection theory. Another interpretation is kin selection: if the males are protecting their offspring, they are protecting copies of their own alleles. Engaging in this behavior would be favored by individual selection if the cost to the male musk ox is less than half of the benefit received by his calf – which could easily be the case if wolves have an easier time killing calves than adult males. It could also be the case that male musk oxen would be individually less likely to be killed by wolves if they stood in a circle with their horns pointing out, regardless of whether they were protecting the females and offspring. That would be an example of regular natural selection – a phenomenon called "the selfish herd".
Dale Jacquette (1994) claims that Occam's razor is the rationale behind eliminativism and reductionism in the philosophy of mind. Eliminativism is the thesis that the ontology of [[folk psychology]] including such entities as "pain", "joy", "desire", "fear", etc., are eliminable in favor of an ontology of a completed neuroscience.


[[Systematics]] is the branch of [[biology]] that attempts to establish patterns of relationship among biological taxa, today generally thought to reflect evolutionary history. It is also concerned with their classification. There are three primary camps in systematics: cladists, pheneticists, and evolutionary taxonomists. Cladists hold that classification should be based on [[synapomorphies]] (shared, derived character states), pheneticists contend that overall similarity (synapomorphies and complementary [[symplesiomorphies]]) is the determining criterion, while evolutionary taxonomists say that both genealogy and similarity count in classification (in a manner determined by the evolutionary taxonomist).<ref>{{Cite book |title=Reconstructing the Past: Parsimony, Evolution, and Inference |last=Sober |first=Elliot |date=1998 |publisher=The MIT Press |isbn=978-0-262-69144-4 |edition=2nd |location=Massachusetts Institute of Technology |page=7}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Phylogenetics: the theory and practice of phylogenetic systematics |last=Wiley |first=Edward O. |date=2011 |edition=2nd |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |isbn=978-0-470-90596-8}}</ref>
Additionally, Occam's razor applied to the demands placed on physical matter by [[Newton's laws of motion|Newton's 3rd Law of Motion]] (every action has an equal and opposite reaction) to explain both the dual-existentialism of matter-in-motion as observed today (motion is always considered a reaction) requiring both a metaphysical initiator of physical matter's existentialism, as well as the metaphysical initiator to initiate the existentialism of the motion of physical matter itself. Occam's razor which would favor the concept of a single (though multi-purposed) metaphysical initiator serving as both the initiator of the temporary time-bounded physical matter's existence as well as the initiator of the existence of matter's time-bound motion itself. Conversely, the assumption of the need for compound or multiple metaphysical entities (call them gods, coincidences or entities), whether non-purposed/purposed entities, causing the dual-existentialism of both matter and its motion, would be contrary to Occam's razor. This relevance is this application of Occam's razor is of course predicated on the acceptance of [[Newton's laws of motion|Newton's Laws of Motion]] to be factual.


It is among the cladists that Occam's razor is applied, through the method of ''cladistic parsimony''. Cladistic parsimony (or [[maximum parsimony]]) is a method of phylogenetic inference that yields [[phylogenetic tree]]s (more specifically, cladograms). [[Cladistics|Cladograms]] are branching, diagrams used to represent hypotheses of relative degree of relationship, based on [[synapomorphies]]. Cladistic parsimony is used to select as the preferred hypothesis of relationships the cladogram that requires the fewest implied character state transformations (or smallest weight, if characters are differentially weighted). Critics of the cladistic approach often observe that for some types of data, parsimony could produce the wrong results, regardless of how much data is collected (this is called statistical inconsistency, or [[long branch attraction]]). However, this criticism is also potentially true for any type of phylogenetic inference, unless the model used to estimate the tree reflects the way that evolution actually happened. Because this information is not empirically accessible, the criticism of statistical inconsistency against parsimony holds no force.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Brower | first1 = AVZ | year = 2017 | title = Statistical consistency and phylogenetic inference: a brief review | journal = Cladistics | volume = 34| issue = 5| pages = 562–567| doi = 10.1111/cla.12216 | pmid = 34649374 | doi-access = free }}</ref> For a book-length treatment of cladistic parsimony, see [[Elliott Sober]]'s ''Reconstructing the Past: Parsimony, Evolution, and Inference'' (1988). For a discussion of both uses of Occam's razor in biology, see Sober's article "Let's Razor Ockham's Razor" (1990).
===Probability theory and statistics===
{{Unreferenced section|date=May 2009}}


Other methods for inferring evolutionary relationships use parsimony in a more general way. [[Likelihood function|Likelihood]] methods for phylogeny use parsimony as they do for all likelihood tests, with hypotheses requiring fewer differing parameters (i.e., numbers or different rates of character change or different frequencies of character state transitions) being treated as null hypotheses relative to hypotheses requiring more differing parameters. Thus, complex hypotheses must predict data much better than do simple hypotheses before researchers reject the simple hypotheses. Recent advances employ [[information theory]], a close cousin of likelihood, which uses Occam's razor in the same way. The choice of the "shortest tree" relative to a not-so-short tree under any optimality criterion (smallest distance, fewest steps, or maximum likelihood) is always based on parsimony.<ref>{{cite book |title =Biological Systematics: Principles and Applications (3rd edn.) |last=Brower & |first=Schuh |date=2021 |publisher=Cornell University Press}}</ref>
One intuitive justification of Occam's Razor's admonition against unnecessary hypotheses is a direct result of basic [[probability theory]]. By definition, all assumptions introduce possibilities for error; If an assumption does not improve the accuracy of a theory, its only effect is to increase the probability that the overall theory is wrong.


[[Francis Crick]] has commented on potential limitations of Occam's razor in biology. He advances the argument that because biological systems are the products of (an ongoing) natural selection, the mechanisms are not necessarily optimal in an obvious sense. He cautions: "While Ockham's razor is a useful tool in the physical sciences, it can be a very dangerous implement in biology. It is thus very rash to use simplicity and elegance as a guide in biological research."<ref>Crick 1988, p. 146.</ref> This is an ontological critique of parsimony.
There are various papers in scholarly journals deriving formal versions of Occam's razor from probability theory and applying it in [[statistical inference]], and also of various criteria for penalizing complexity in statistical inference. Recent papers have suggested a connection between Occam's razor and [[Kolmogorov complexity]].


In [[biogeography]], parsimony is used to infer ancient vicariant events or [[Historical migration|migrations]] of [[species]] or [[population]]s by observing the geographic distribution and relationships of existing [[organism]]s. Given the phylogenetic tree, ancestral population subdivisions are inferred to be those that require the minimum amount of change.{{citation needed|date=March 2024}}
One of the problems with the original formulation of the principle is that it only applies to models with the same explanatory power (i.e. prefer the simplest of equally good models). A more general form of Occam's razor can be derived from [[Bayesian model comparison]] and [[Bayes factor]]s, which can be used to compare models that don't fit the data equally well. These methods can sometimes optimally balance the complexity and power of a model. Generally the exact Ockham factor is [[intractable]] but approximations such as [[Akaike Information Criterion]], [[Bayesian Information Criterion]], [[Variational Bayes]], [[False discovery rate]] and [[Laplace approximation]] are used. Many [[artificial intelligence]] researchers are now employing such techniques.


=== Religion ===
William H. Jefferys and James O. Berger (1991) generalise and quantify the original formulation's "assumptions" concept as the degree to which a proposition is unnecessarily accommodating to possible observable data. The model they propose balances the precision of a theory's predictions against their sharpness; theories which sharply made their correct predictions are preferred over theories which would have accommodated a wide range of other possible results. This, again, reflects the mathematical relationship between key concepts in [[Bayesian inference]] (namely [[marginal probability]], [[conditional probability]] and [[posterior probability]]).
{{Main| Existence of God}}


In the [[philosophy of religion]], Occam's razor is sometimes applied to the existence of God. William of Ockham himself was a [[Christianity|Christian]]. He believed in God, and in the [[Biblical authority|authority]] of [[Christian scripture]]; he writes that "nothing ought to be posited without a reason given, unless it is self-evident (literally, known through itself) or known by experience or proved by the authority of Sacred Scripture."<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |title=Encyclopedia of Philosophy |publisher=Stanford |access-date=24 February 2016 |contribution-url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ockham/ |contribution=William Ockham |archive-date=7 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191007132502/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ockham/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Ockham believed that an explanation has no sufficient basis in reality when it does not harmonize with reason, experience, or the [[Christian Bible|Bible]]. Unlike many theologians of his time, though, Ockham did not believe God could be logically proven with arguments. To Ockham, science was a matter of discovery; [[theology]] was a matter of [[revelation]] and [[faith]]. He states: "Only faith gives us access to theological truths. The ways of God are not open to reason, for God has freely chosen to create a world and establish a way of salvation within it apart from any necessary laws that human logic or rationality can uncover."<ref>Dale T Irvin & Scott W Sunquist. ''History of World Christian Movement Volume, I: Earliest Christianity to 1453'', p. 434. {{ISBN|9781570753961}}.</ref>
The statistical view leads to a more rigorous formulation of the razor than previous philosophical discussions. In particular, it shows that 'simplicity' must first be defined in some way before the razor may be used, and that this definition will always be subjective{{Why?|date=August 2010}}. For example, in the Kolmogorov-Chaitin [[Minimum description length]] approach, the subject must pick a [[Turing machine]] whose operations describe the basic operations believed to represent 'simplicity' by the subject. However one could always choose a Turing machine with a simple operation that happened to construct one's entire theory and would hence score highly under the razor. This has led to two opposing views of the objectivity of Occam's razor.


[[Thomas Aquinas]], in the ''[[Summa Theologica]]'', uses a formulation of Occam's razor to construct an objection to the idea that God exists, which he refutes directly with a counterargument:<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1002.htm |title=SUMMA THEOLOGICA: The existence of God (Prima Pars, Q. 2) |publisher=Newadvent.org |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130428053715/http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1002.htm |archive-date=28 April 2013 |access-date=26 March 2013}}</ref>
====Objective razor====
The minimum instruction set of a [[Universal Turing machine]] requires approximately the same length description across different formulations, and is small compared to the [[Kolmogorov complexity]] of most practical theories. [[Marcus Hutter]] has used this consistency to define a "natural" Turing machine<ref>[http://www.hutter1.net/ait.htm Algorithmic Information Theory]</ref> of small size as the proper basis for excluding arbitrarily complex instruction sets in the formulation of razors. Describing the program for the universal program as the "hypothesis", and the representation of the evidence as program data, it has been formally proven under [[Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory|ZF]] that "the sum of the log universal probability of the model plus the log of the probability of the data given the model should be minimized." <ref>Paul M. B. Vitányi and Ming Li; IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Volume 46, Issue 2, Mar 2000 Page(s):446–464, "Minimum Description Length Induction, Bayesianism and Kolmogorov Complexity".</ref>


<blockquote>Further, it is superfluous to suppose that what can be accounted for by a few principles has been produced by many. But it seems that everything we see in the world can be accounted for by other principles, supposing God did not exist. For all natural things can be reduced to one principle which is nature; and all voluntary things can be reduced to one principle which is human reason, or will. Therefore there is no need to suppose God's existence.</blockquote>
One possible conclusion from mixing the concepts of Kolmogorov complexity and Occam's Razor is that an ideal data compressor would also be a scientific explanation/formulation generator. Some attempts have been made to re-derive known laws from considerations of simplicity or compressibility.<ref>[http://arxiv.org/pdf/math-ph/0009007 'Occam’s Razor as a formal basis for a physical theory' by Andrei N. Soklakov]</ref><ref>[http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0001020 'Why Occam's Razor' by Russell Standish]</ref>


In turn, Aquinas answers this with the ''[[quinque viae]]'', and addresses the particular objection above with the following answer:
According to [[Jürgen Schmidhuber]], the appropriate mathematical theory of Occam's razor already exists, namely, [[Ray Solomonoff]]'s theory of optimal inductive inference <ref>[[Ray Solomonoff]] (1964): A formal theory of inductive inference. Part I. Information and Control, 7:1–22, 1964</ref> and its extensions.<ref>[[Jürgen Schmidhuber|J. Schmidhuber]] (2006) The New AI: General & Sound & Relevant for Physics. In B. Goertzel and C. Pennachin, eds.: Artificial General Intelligence, p. 177-200 http://arxiv.org/abs/cs.AI/0302012</ref>


<blockquote>Since nature works for a determinate end under the direction of a higher agent, whatever is done by nature must needs be traced back to God, as to its first cause. So also whatever is done voluntarily must also be traced back to some higher cause other than human reason or will, since these can change or fail; for all things that are changeable and capable of defect must be traced back to an immovable and self-necessary first principle, as was shown in the body of the Article.</blockquote>
==Variations==


Rather than argue for the necessity of a god, some [[Theism|theists]] base their belief upon grounds independent of, or prior to, reason, making Occam's razor irrelevant. This was the stance of [[Søren Kierkegaard]], who viewed belief in God as a [[leap of faith]] that sometimes directly opposed reason.<ref>McDonald 2005.</ref> This is also the doctrine of [[Gordon Clark]]'s [[presuppositional apologetics]], with the exception that Clark never thought the leap of faith was contrary to reason (see also [[Fideism]]).
The first expression of the principle is given by [[Aristotle]] in his Posterior Analytics, Book I, Ch. 25:


Various [[Arguments for the existence of God|arguments in favor of God]] establish God as a useful or even necessary assumption. Contrastingly some anti-theists hold firmly to the belief that assuming the existence of God introduces unnecessary complexity (e.g., the [[Ultimate Boeing 747 gambit]] from Dawkins's ''[[The God Delusion]]''<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dawkins |first=Richard |title=The God delusion |date=January 1, 2007 |publisher=Black Swan |isbn=978-0-552-77331-7 |location=London |pages=157–158}}</ref>).<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Schmitt |first1=Carl |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226738901.001.0001 |title=Political Theology |last2=Schwab |first2=George |last3=Strong |first3=Tracy B. |date=2005 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |doi=10.7208/chicago/9780226738901.001.0001 |isbn=978-0-226-73889-5}}</ref>
{{quotation|Demonstration by fewer postulates or hypothesis (in short from fewer premises) is ''ceteris paribus'' superior; for, given that all of these are equally well known, where they are fewer, knowledge will be more speedily acquired, and that is a desideratum.}}


Another application of the principle is to be found in the work of [[George Berkeley]] (1685–1753). Berkeley was an idealist who believed that all of reality could be explained in terms of the mind alone. He invoked Occam's razor against [[materialism]], stating that matter was not required by his metaphysics and was thus eliminable. One potential problem with this belief{{For whom | date = February 2021 }} is that it's possible, given Berkeley's position, to find [[solipsism]] itself more in line with the razor than a God-mediated world beyond a single thinker.
The principle is most often expressed as ''Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem'', or "Entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity", but this sentence was written by later authors and is not found in Ockham's surviving writings. This also applies to ''non est ponenda pluritas sine necessitate'', which translates literally into [[English language|English]] as "pluralities ought not be posited without necessity". It has inspired numerous expressions including "parsimony of postulates", the "principle of simplicity", the "[[KISS principle]]" (Keep It Simple, Stupid).


Occam's razor may also be recognized in the apocryphal story about an exchange between [[Pierre-Simon Laplace]] and [[Napoleon]]. It is said that in praising Laplace for one of his recent publications, the emperor asked how it was that the name of God, which featured so frequently in the writings of [[Lagrange]], appeared nowhere in Laplace's. At that, he is said to have replied, "It's because I had no need of that hypothesis."<ref>p. 282, [https://books.google.com/books?id=88xZAAAAcAAJ ''Mémoires du docteur F. Antommarchi, ou les derniers momens de Napoléon''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160514072842/https://books.google.com/books?id=88xZAAAAcAAJ |date=14 May 2016 }}, vol. 1, 1825, Paris: Barrois L'Ainé</ref> Though some points of this story illustrate Laplace's [[atheism]], more careful consideration suggests that he may instead have intended merely to illustrate the power of [[methodological naturalism]], or even simply that the fewer [[premise|logical premises]] one assumes, the [[List of mathematical jargon#strong|stronger]] is one's conclusion.
Other common restatements are:


=== Philosophy of mind ===
{{quotation|Entities are not to be multiplied without necessity.}}
In his article "Sensations and Brain Processes" (1959), [[J. J. C. Smart]] invoked Occam's razor with the aim to justify his preference of the [[mind-brain identity theory]] over [[mind-body dualism|spirit-body dualism]]. Dualists state that there are two kinds of substances in the universe: physical (including the body) and spiritual, which is non-physical. In contrast, identity theorists state that everything is physical, including consciousness, and that there is nothing nonphysical. Though it is impossible to appreciate the spiritual when limiting oneself to the physical,{{Citation needed|date=November 2020}} Smart maintained that identity theory explains all phenomena by assuming only a physical reality. Subsequently, Smart has been severely criticized for his use (or misuse) of Occam's razor and ultimately retracted his advocacy of it in this context. [[Paul Churchland]] (1984) states that by itself Occam's razor is inconclusive regarding duality. In a similar way, Dale Jacquette (1994) stated that Occam's razor has been used in attempts to justify eliminativism and reductionism in the philosophy of mind. Eliminativism is the thesis that the ontology of [[folk psychology]] including such entities as "pain", "joy", "desire", "fear", etc., are eliminable in favor of an ontology of a completed neuroscience.


=== Penal ethics ===
A restatement of Occam's razor, in more formal terms, is provided by [[information theory]] in the form of [[minimum message length]]
In penal theory and the philosophy of punishment, parsimony refers specifically to taking care in the distribution of [[punishment]] in order to avoid excessive punishment. In the [[utilitarianism|utilitarian]] approach to the philosophy of punishment, [[Jeremy Bentham]]'s "parsimony principle" states that any punishment greater than is required to achieve its end is unjust. The concept is related but not identical to the legal concept of [[proportionality (law)|proportionality]]. Parsimony is a key consideration of the modern [[restorative justice]], and is a component of utilitarian approaches to punishment, as well as the [[prison abolition movement]]. Bentham believed that true parsimony would require punishment to be individualised to take account of the [[sensibility]] of the individual—an individual more sensitive to punishment should be given a proportionately lesser one, since otherwise needless pain would be inflicted. Later utilitarian writers have tended to abandon this idea, in large part due to the impracticality of determining each alleged criminal's relative sensitivity to specific punishments.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Tonry |first=Michael |year=2005 |title=Obsolescence and Immanence in Penal Theory and Policy |url=http://www.columbialawreview.org/pdf/Tonry-Web.pdf |journal=[[Columbia Law Review]] |volume=105 |pages=1233–1275|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060623074821/http://www.columbialawreview.org/pdf/Tonry-Web.pdf |archive-date=23 June 2006 }}</ref>
([[Minimum message length|MML]]). Tests of Occam's razor on [[decision tree]] models which initially appeared critical have been shown to actually work fine when re-visited using [[Minimum message length|MML]]. Other criticisms of Occam's razor and [[Minimum message length|MML]] (e.g., a binary cut-point segmentation problem) have again been rectified when—crucially—an inefficient coding scheme is made more efficient.


=== Probability theory and statistics ===
"When deciding between two models which make equivalent predictions, choose the simpler one," makes the point that a simpler model that doesn't make equivalent predictions is not among the models that this criterion applies to in the first place.<ref>[http://users.openface.ca/~cobe/occams-razor/interpretations.html]</ref>
Marcus Hutter's universal artificial intelligence builds upon [[Solomonoff's theory of inductive inference|Solomonoff's mathematical formalization of the razor]] to calculate the expected value of an action.


There are various papers in scholarly journals deriving formal versions of Occam's razor from probability theory, applying it in [[statistical inference]], and using it to come up with criteria for penalizing complexity in statistical inference. Papers<ref name="ReferenceC">{{Cite journal |last1=Wallace |first1=C. S. |last2=Boulton |first2=D. M. |date=1968-08-01 |title=An Information Measure for Classification |url=https://academic.oup.com/comjnl/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/comjnl/11.2.185 |journal=The Computer Journal |language=en |volume=11 |issue=2 |pages=185–194 |doi=10.1093/comjnl/11.2.185 }}</ref><ref name="auto">{{Cite journal |last=Wallace |first=C. S. |date=1999-04-01 |title=Minimum Message Length and Kolmogorov Complexity |url=https://www.csse.monash.edu/~dld/Publications/1999/WallaceDowe1999aMinimumMessageLengthAndKolmogorovComplexity.pdf |journal=The Computer Journal |language=en |volume=42 |issue=4 |pages=270–283 |doi=10.1093/comjnl/42.4.270 }}</ref> have suggested a connection between Occam's razor and [[Kolmogorov complexity]].<ref name="Volker">{{Cite web |url=http://volker.nannen.com/pdf/short_introduction_to_model_selection.pdf |title=A short introduction to Model Selection, Kolmogorov Complexity and Minimum Description Length |last=Nannen |first=Volker |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100602044851/http://volker.nannen.com/pdf/short_introduction_to_model_selection.pdf |archive-date=2 June 2010 |access-date=3 July 2010}}</ref>
[[Leonardo da Vinci]] (1452–1519) lived after Ockham's time and has a variant of Occam's razor. His variant short-circuits the need for sophistication by equating it to simplicity.


One of the problems with the original formulation of the razor is that it only applies to models with the same explanatory power (i.e., it only tells us to prefer the simplest of equally good models). A more general form of the razor can be derived from Bayesian model comparison, which is based on [[Bayes factor]]s and can be used to compare models that do not fit the observations equally well. These methods can sometimes optimally balance the complexity and power of a model. Generally, the exact Occam factor is intractable, but approximations such as [[Akaike information criterion]], [[Bayesian information criterion]], [[Variational Bayesian methods]], [[false discovery rate]], and [[Laplace's method]] are used. Many [[artificial intelligence]] researchers are now employing such techniques, for instance through work on [[Occam Learning]] or more generally on the [[Free energy principle]].
{{quotation|Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.}}


Statistical versions of Occam's razor have a more rigorous formulation than what philosophical discussions produce. In particular, they must have a specific definition of the term ''simplicity'', and that definition can vary. For example, in the [[Andrey Kolmogorov|Kolmogorov]]–[[Gregory Chaitin|Chaitin]] [[minimum description length]] approach, the subject must pick a [[Turing machine]] whose operations describe the basic operations ''believed'' to represent "simplicity" by the subject. However, one could always choose a Turing machine with a simple operation that happened to construct one's entire theory and would hence score highly under the razor. This has led to two opposing camps: one that believes Occam's razor is objective, and one that believes it is subjective.
Another related quote is attributed to [[Albert Einstein]]


==== Objective razor ====
{{quotation|Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler.}}
The minimum instruction set of a [[universal Turing machine]] requires approximately the same length description across different formulations, and is small compared to the [[Kolmogorov complexity]] of most practical theories. [[Marcus Hutter]] has used this consistency to define a "natural" Turing machine of small size as the proper basis for excluding arbitrarily complex instruction sets in the formulation of razors.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.hutter1.net/ait.htm |title=Algorithmic Information Theory |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071224043538/http://www.hutter1.net/ait.htm |archive-date=24 December 2007}}</ref> Describing the program for the universal program as the "hypothesis", and the representation of the evidence as program data, it has been formally proven under [[Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory]] that "the sum of the log universal probability of the model plus the log of the probability of the data given the model should be minimized."<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Vitanyi |first1=P.M.B. |last2=Ming Li |date=March 2000 |title=Minimum description length induction, Bayesianism, and Kolmogorov complexity |url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/825807 |journal=IEEE Transactions on Information Theory |volume=46 |issue=2 |pages=446–464 |doi=10.1109/18.825807|arxiv=cs/9901014 }}</ref> Interpreting this as minimising the total length of a two-part message encoding model followed by data given model gives us the [[minimum message length]] (MML) principle.<ref name="ReferenceC" /><ref name="auto" />


One possible conclusion from mixing the concepts of Kolmogorov complexity and Occam's razor is that an ideal data compressor would also be a scientific explanation/formulation generator. Some attempts have been made to re-derive known laws from considerations of simplicity or compressibility.<ref name="ReferenceB" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Standish |first=Russell K |year=2000 |title=Why Occam's Razor |journal=Foundations of Physics Letters |volume=17 |issue=3 |pages=255–266 |arxiv=physics/0001020 |bibcode=2004FoPhL..17..255S |doi=10.1023/B:FOPL.0000032475.18334.0e|s2cid=17143230 }}</ref>
Occam's razor is now usually stated as follows:


According to [[Jürgen Schmidhuber]], the appropriate mathematical theory of Occam's razor already exists, namely, [[Ray Solomonoff|Solomonoff's]] [[Solomonoff's theory of inductive inference|theory of optimal inductive inference]]<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Solomonoff |first=Ray |author-link=Ray Solomonoff |year=1964 |title=A formal theory of inductive inference. Part I. |journal=Information and Control |volume=7 |issue=1–22 |page=1964 |doi=10.1016/s0019-9958(64)90223-2|doi-access=free }}</ref> and its extensions.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Artificial General Intelligence |last=Schmidhuber |first=J. |year=2006 |editor-last=Goertzel |editor-first=B. |pages=177–200 |chapter=The New AI: General & Sound & Relevant for Physics |arxiv=cs.AI/0302012 |author-link=Jürgen Schmidhuber |editor-last2=Pennachin |editor-first2=C.}}</ref> See discussions in David L. Dowe's "Foreword re C. S. Wallace"<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dowe |first=David L. |year=2008 |title=Foreword re C. S. Wallace |journal=Computer Journal |volume=51 |issue=5 |pages=523–560 |doi=10.1093/comjnl/bxm117|s2cid=5387092 }}</ref> for the subtle distinctions between the [[algorithmic probability]] work of Solomonoff and the MML work of [[Chris Wallace (computer scientist)|Chris Wallace]], and see Dowe's "MML, hybrid Bayesian network graphical models, statistical consistency, invariance and uniqueness"<ref>David L. Dowe (2010): "MML, hybrid Bayesian network graphical models, statistical consistency, invariance and uniqueness. A formal theory of inductive inference." ''Handbook of the Philosophy of Science''{{spaced ndash}}(HPS Volume 7) Philosophy of Statistics, Elsevier 2010 Page(s):901–982. https://web.archive.org/web/20140204001435/http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.185.709&rep=rep1&type=pdf</ref> both for such discussions and for (in section 4) discussions of MML and Occam's razor. For a specific example of MML as Occam's razor in the problem of decision tree induction, see Dowe and Needham's "Message Length as an Effective Ockham's Razor in Decision Tree Induction".<ref>Scott Needham and David L. Dowe (2001):" Message Length as an Effective Ockham's Razor in Decision Tree Induction." Proc. 8th International Workshop on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics (AI+STATS 2001), Key West, Florida, U.S.A., January 2001 Page(s): 253–260 {{Cite web |url=http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~dld/Publications/2001/Needham+Dowe2001_Ockham.pdf |title=2001 Ockham.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150923211645/http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~dld/Publications/2001/Needham+Dowe2001_Ockham.pdf |archive-date=23 September 2015 |access-date=2 September 2015}}</ref>
{{quotation|Of two equivalent theories or explanations, all other things being equal, the [[simplicity|simpler]] one is to be preferred.}}


==== Mathematical arguments against Occam's razor ====
As this is ambiguous, [[Isaac Newton]]'s version may be better:
{{Technical|date=February 2024|section}}
The [[No free lunch theorem|no free lunch]] (NFL) theorems for inductive inference prove that Occam's razor must rely on ultimately arbitrary assumptions concerning the prior probability distribution found in our world.<ref name="Adam2019">Adam, S., and Pardalos, P. (2019), [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stamatios-Aggelos-Alexandropoulos-2/publication/333007007_No_Free_Lunch_Theorem_A_Review/links/5e84f65792851c2f52742c85/No-Free-Lunch-Theorem-A-Review.pdf No-free lunch Theorem: A review], in "Approximation and Optimization", Springer, 57-82</ref> Specifically, suppose one is given two inductive inference algorithms, A and B, where A is a [[Bayesian inference|Bayesian]] procedure based on the choice of some prior distribution motivated by Occam's razor (e.g., the prior might favor hypotheses with smaller [[Kolmogorov complexity]]). Suppose that B is the anti-Bayes procedure, which calculates what the Bayesian algorithm A based on Occam's razor will predict – and then predicts the exact opposite. Then there are just as many actual priors (including those different from the Occam's razor prior assumed by A) in which algorithm B outperforms A as priors in which the procedure A based on Occam's razor comes out on top. In particular, the NFL theorems show that the "Occam factors" Bayesian argument for Occam's razor must make ultimately arbitrary modeling assumptions.<ref name="WOLP95">Wolpert, D.H (1995), On the Bayesian "Occam Factors" Argument for Occam's Razor, in "Computational Learning Theory and Natural Learning Systems: Selecting Good Models", MIT Press</ref>


=== Software development ===
{{quotation|We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances.}}
In software development, the [[rule of least power]] argues the correct [[programming language]] to use is the one that is simplest while also solving the targeted software problem. In that form the rule is often credited to [[Tim Berners-Lee]] since it appeared in his design guidelines for the original [[Hypertext Transfer Protocol]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Principles.html |first=Tim |last=Berners-Lee |author-link=Tim Berners-Lee |date=4 March 2013 |title=Principles of Design |website=[[World Wide Web Consortium]] |access-date=5 June 2022 |archive-date=15 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220615065514/https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Principles.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Complexity in this context is measured either by placing a language into the [[Chomsky hierarchy]] or by listing idiomatic features of the language and comparing according to some agreed to scale of difficulties between idioms. Many languages once thought to be of lower complexity have evolved or later been discovered to be more complex than originally intended; so, in practice this rule is applied to the relative ease of a programmer to obtain the power of the language, rather than the precise theoretical limits of the language.


== Controversial aspects ==
In the spirit of Occam's razor itself, the rule is sometimes stated as:
Occam's razor is not an embargo against the positing of any kind of entity, or a recommendation of the simplest theory come what may.{{Refn|"Ockham's razor does not say that the more simple a hypothesis, the better."<ref name="SkepticDict2012">{{Cite book |title=The Skeptic's Dictionary |last=Robert T. Carroll |chapter=Occam's Razor |date=12 September 2014 |author-link=Robert Todd Carroll |access-date=24 February 2016 |chapter-url=http://www.skepdic.com/occam.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160301193834/http://www.skepdic.com/occam.html |archive-date=1 March 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref>|group=lower-alpha}} Occam's razor is used to adjudicate between theories that have already passed "theoretical scrutiny" tests and are equally well-supported by evidence.{{Refn|"Today, we think of the principle of parsimony as a heuristic device. We don't assume that the simpler theory is correct and the more complex one false. We know from experience that more often than not the theory that requires more complicated machinations is wrong. Until proved otherwise, the more complex theory competing with a simpler explanation should be put on the back burner, but not thrown onto the trash heap of history until proven false."<ref name="SkepticDict2012" />|group=lower-alpha}} Furthermore, it may be used to prioritize empirical testing between two equally plausible but unequally testable hypotheses; thereby minimizing costs and wastes while increasing chances of falsification of the simpler-to-test hypothesis.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}


Another contentious aspect of the razor is that a theory can become more complex in terms of its structure (or [[syntax]]), while its [[ontology]] (or [[semantics]]) becomes simpler, or vice versa.{{Refn|"While these two facets of simplicity are frequently conflated, it is important to treat them as distinct. One reason for doing so is that considerations of parsimony and of elegance typically pull in different directions. Postulating extra entities may allow a theory to be formulated more simply, while reducing the ontology of a theory may only be possible at the price of making it syntactically more complex."<ref name="fn_(109)" />|group=lower-alpha}} Quine, in a discussion on definition, referred to these two perspectives as "economy of practical expression" and "economy in grammar and vocabulary", respectively.<ref>{{Cite book |title=From a logical point of view |last=Quine |first=W V O |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1961 |isbn=978-0-674-32351-3 |location=Cambridge |pages=20–46 |chapter=Two dogmas of empiricism |author-link=W. V. Quine}}</ref>
{{quotation|The simplest explanation is usually the best.}}


[[Galileo Galilei]] lampooned the ''misuse'' of Occam's razor in his ''[[Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems|Dialogue]]''. The principle is represented in the dialogue by Simplicio. The telling point that Galileo presented ironically was that if one really wanted to start from a small number of entities, one could always consider the letters of the alphabet as the fundamental entities, since one could construct the whole of human knowledge out of them.
Another common statement of it is:


Instances of using Occam's razor to justify belief in less complex and more simple theories have been criticized as using the razor inappropriately. For instance [[Francis Crick]] stated that "While Occam's razor is a useful tool in the physical sciences, it can be a very dangerous implement in biology. It is thus very rash to use simplicity and elegance as a guide in biological research."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Gross |first=Fridolin |date=December 2019 |title=Occam's Razor in Molecular and Systems Biology |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S003182480001552X/type/journal_article |journal=Philosophy of Science |language=en |volume=86 |issue=5 |pages=1134–1145 |doi=10.1086/705474 }}</ref>
{{quotation|The simplest explanation that covers all the facts is usually the best.}}


== Anti-razors ==
And [[Ayn Rand]] stated it as follows <ref>[http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/rands_razor.html]</ref>:
Occam's razor has met some opposition from people who consider it too extreme or rash. [[Walter Chatton]] ({{circa| 1290–1343}}) was a contemporary of William of Ockham who took exception to Occam's razor and Ockham's use of it. In response he devised his own ''anti-razor'': "If three things are not enough to verify an affirmative proposition about things, a fourth must be added and so on." Although there have been several philosophers who have formulated similar anti-razors since Chatton's time, no one anti-razor has perpetuated as notably as Chatton's anti-razor, although this could be the case of the Late Renaissance Italian motto of unknown attribution {{lang|it|Se non è vero, è ben trovato}} ("Even if it is not true, it is well conceived") when referred to a particularly artful explanation.


Anti-razors have also been created by [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] (1646–1716), [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724–1804), and [[Karl Menger]] (1902–1985). Leibniz's version took the form of a [[principle of plenitude]], as [[Arthur Lovejoy]] has called it: the idea being that God created the most varied and populous of possible worlds. Kant felt a need to moderate the effects of Occam's razor and thus created his own counter-razor: "The variety of beings should not rashly be diminished."<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~ppp/cpr/toc.html |title=The Critique of Pure Reason |last=Immanuel Kant |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |year=1929 |editor-last=Norman Kemp-Smith transl |page=92 |quote=Entium varietates non-temere esse minuendas |author-link=Immanuel Kant |access-date=27 October 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120516172030/http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~ppp/cpr/toc.html |archive-date=16 May 2012 |url-status=live}}</ref>
{{quotation|Concepts are not to be multiplied beyond necessity—the corollary of which is: nor are they to be integrated in disregard of necessity.}}


Karl Menger found mathematicians to be too parsimonious with regard to variables so he formulated his Law Against Miserliness, which took one of two forms: "Entities must not be reduced to the point of inadequacy" and "It is vain to do with fewer what requires more." A less serious but even more extremist anti-razor is [['Pataphysics]], the "science of imaginary solutions" developed by [[Alfred Jarry]] (1873–1907). Perhaps the ultimate in anti-reductionism, "'Pataphysics seeks no less than to view each event in the universe as completely unique, subject to no laws but its own." Variations on this theme were subsequently explored by the Argentine writer [[Jorge Luis Borges]] in his story/mock-essay "[[Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius]]". Physicist [[Reginald Victor Jones|R. V. Jones]] contrived Crabtree's Bludgeon, which states that "[n]o set of mutually inconsistent observations can exist for which some human intellect cannot conceive a coherent explanation, however complicated."<ref name="Woo2011">{{cite book|author=Gordon Woo|title=Calculating Catastrophe|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hsy6CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA303|date=20 June 2011|publisher=World Scientific|isbn=978-1-84816-893-0|pages=303–|access-date=10 August 2021|archive-date=28 October 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231028141247/https://books.google.com/books?id=hsy6CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA303#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref>
==Controversial aspects of the Razor==
Occam's razor is not an embargo against the positing of any kind of entity, or a
recommendation of the simplest theory come what may<ref>["But Ockham's razor does not say that the more simple a hypothesis, the better." http://www.skepdic.com/occam.html Skeptic's Dictionary]</ref> (note that simplest theory is something like "[[Solipsism|only I exist]]" or "nothing exists").


Recently, American physicist Igor Mazin argued that because high-profile physics journals prefer publications offering exotic and unusual interpretations, the Occam's razor principle is being replaced by an "Inverse Occam's razor", implying that the simplest possible explanation is usually rejected.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mazin |first=Igor |date=April 2022 |title=Inverse Occam's razor |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-022-01575-2 |journal=Nature Physics |language=en |volume=18 |issue=4 |pages=367–368 |doi=10.1038/s41567-022-01575-2 |arxiv=2204.08284 |bibcode=2022NatPh..18..367M |s2cid=247832936 |access-date=9 July 2023 |archive-date=9 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230709190723/https://www.nature.com/articles/s41567-022-01575-2 |url-status=live }}</ref>
The other things in question are the evidential support for the theory.<ref>"when you have two competing theories which make exactly the same predictions, the one that is simpler is the better."[http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/ Usenet Physics FAQs]</ref> Therefore, according to the principle, a simpler but less correct theory should not be preferred over a more complex but more correct one. ''It is this fact which gives the lie to the common misinterpretation of Occam's Razor that "the simplest" one is usually the correct one''.


== Other ==
For instance, [[classical physics]] is simpler than more recent theories; nonetheless it should not be preferred over them, because it is demonstrably wrong in certain respects.


{{As of|since=y|2012}}, ''[[The Skeptic (UK magazine)|The Skeptic]]'' magazine annually awards the Ockham Awards, or simply the Ockhams, named after Occam's razor, at [[QED (conference)|QED]].<ref name="Skepter">{{Cite journal |last=Korteweg |first=Leon |date=2 December 2016 |title=QED 2016 – verslag van een lang weekend tussen skeptici |url=https://kloptdatwel.nl/2016/12/02/verslag-qed-2016/ |url-status=live |journal=[[Skepter]] |language=nl |publisher=[[Stichting Skepsis]] |volume=29 |issue=4 |pages=45–46 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171018012920/https://kloptdatwel.nl/2016/12/02/verslag-qed-2016/ |archive-date=2017-10-18 |access-date=21 October 2017}}</ref> The Ockhams were introduced by editor-in-chief [[Deborah Hyde]] to "recognise the effort and time that have gone into the community's favourite skeptical blogs, skeptical podcasts, skeptical campaigns and outstanding contributors to the skeptical cause."<ref name="Ockham2012">{{Cite news |url=https://www.skeptic.org.uk/features/awards2011update/ |title=The Skeptic Magazine Awards 2011: Winners |last=Hyde |first=Deborah|author-link=Deborah Hyde | work=[[The Skeptic (UK magazine)|The Skeptic]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023062116/https://www.skeptic.org.uk/features/awards2011update/ |archive-date=2017-10-23 |url-status=live |year=2012 |issue=4 |volume=23}}</ref> The [[trophy|trophies]], designed by Neil Davies and Karl Derrick, carry the upper text "''Ockham's''" and the lower text "''The Skeptic. Shaving away unnecessary assumptions since 1285.''" Between the texts, there is an image of a double-edged [[safety razor]]blade, and both lower corners feature an image of William of Ockham's face.<ref name="Ockham2012" />
Occam's razor is used to adjudicate between theories that have already passed 'theoretical scrutiny' tests, and which are equally well-supported by the evidence.<ref>"Today, we think of the principle of parsimony as a heuristic device. We don't assume that the simpler theory is correct and the more complex one false. We know from experience that more often than not the theory that requires more complicated machinations is wrong. Until proved otherwise, the more complex theory competing with a simpler explanation should be put on the back burner, but not thrown onto the trash heap of history until proven false." ([http://www.skepdic.com/occam.html The Skeptic's dictionary])</ref> Furthermore, it may be used to prioritize empirical testing between two equally plausible but unequally testable hypotheses; thereby minimizing costs and wastes while increasing chances of falsification of the simpler-to-test hypothesis.


== See also ==
Another contentious aspect of the Razor is that a theory can become more complex in terms of its structure (or [[syntax]]), while its [[ontology]] (or [[semantics]]) becomes simpler, or vice versa.<ref>"While these two facets of simplicity are frequently conflated, it is important to treat them as distinct. One reason for doing so is that considerations of parsimony and of elegance typically pull in different directions. Postulating extra entities may allow a theory to be formulated more simply, while reducing the ontology of a theory may only be possible at the price of making it syntactically more complex." [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/simplicity/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]</ref> The [[theory of relativity]] is often given as an example of the proliferation of complex words to describe a simple concept.
{{Commons category|Occam's razor}}
{{Portal|Philosophy|Psychology|Science}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em|small=no}}
* {{annotated link|Chekhov's gun}}
* {{annotated link|Duck test}}
* {{annotated link|Explanatory power}}
* {{annotated link|Hanlon's razor}}
* {{annotated link|Hickam's dictum}}
* {{annotated link|Hitchens's razor}}
* {{annotated link|KISS principle}}
* {{annotated link|Minimum description length}}
* {{annotated link|Minimum message length}}
* {{annotated link|Newton's flaming laser sword}}
* {{annotated link|Philosophical razor}}
* {{annotated link|Philosophy of science}}
* {{annotated link|Russell's teapot}}
* {{annotated link|Simplicity}}
{{colend}}


== Notes ==
[[Galileo Galilei]] lampooned the ''misuse'' of Occam's Razor in his ''[[Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems|Dialogue]]''. The principle is represented in the dialogue by ''Simplicio''. The telling point that Galileo presented ironically was that if you really wanted to start from a small number of entities, you could always consider the letters of the alphabet as the fundamental entities, since you could certainly construct the whole of human knowledge out of them.
{{Notelist}}


==Anti-razors==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
Occam's razor has met some opposition from people who have considered it too extreme or rash. [[Walter Chatton|Walter of Chatton]] was a contemporary of William of Ockham (1287–1347) who took exception to Ockham's razor and Ockham's use of it. In response he devised his own ''anti-razor'': "If three things are not enough to verify an affirmative proposition about things, a fourth must be added, and so on".


== Further reading ==
Anti-razors have also been created by [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] (1646–1716), [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724–1804), and [[Karl Menger]]. Leibniz's version took the form of a [[principle of plenitude]], as [[Arthur Lovejoy]] has called it, the idea being that God created the most varied and populous of possible worlds. Kant felt a need to moderate the effects of Ockham's Razor by proffering his own counter-razor: "The variety of beings should not rashly be diminished."<ref>Original Latin: ''Entium varietates non temere esse minuendas''. Kant, Immanuel (1950): The Critique of Pure Reason, transl. Kemp Smith, London. Available here: [http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~ppp/cpr/toc.html]</ref>
{{Refbegin|30em}}
Einstein supposedly remarked, "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."<ref>[http://books.google.com/books/yup?hl=en&q=simple+as+possible&vid=ISBN9780300107982 Shapiro, Fred R., ed. (2006), The Yale Book of Quotations, Yale Press, ISBN 978-0-300-10798-2]</ref>
* {{Cite book |title=Ockham's Razor: A Historical and Philosophical Analysis of Ockham's Principle of Parsimony |last=Ariew |first=Roger |publisher=Champaign-Urbana, University of Illinois |year=1976}}

* {{Cite book |title=Matter and Consciousness |last=Churchland |first=Paul M. |publisher=[[MIT Press]] |year=1984 |isbn=978-0-262-53050-7 |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |author-link=Paul Churchland}}
Karl Menger formulated his Law Against Miserliness which took one of two forms: "Entities must not be reduced to the point of inadequacy" and "It is vain to do with fewer what requires more". See "Ockham's Razor and Chatton's Anti-Razor" (1984) by Armand Maurer.
* {{Cite book |title=What Mad Pursuit: A Personal View of Scientific Discovery |title-link=What Mad Pursuit: A Personal View of Scientific Discovery |last=Crick |first=Francis H. C. |publisher=[[Basic Books]] |year=1988 |isbn=978-0-465-09137-9 |location=New York, New York |author-link=Francis Crick}}

* {{Cite journal |last1=Dowe |first1=David L. |last2=Steve Gardner |last3=Graham Oppy |date=December 2007 |title=Bayes not Bust! Why Simplicity is no Problem for Bayesians |url=http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/2877/1/DoweGardnerOppy_draftBayesNotBust.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/2877/1/DoweGardnerOppy_draftBayesNotBust.pdf |archive-date=9 October 2022 |url-status=live |journal=British Journal for the Philosophy of Science |volume=58 |issue=4 |pages=709–754 |doi=10.1093/bjps/axm033 |s2cid=8863978 }}
A less serious, but (some might say) even more extremist anti-razor is [['Pataphysics]], the "science of imaginary solutions" invented by [[Alfred Jarry]] (1873–1907). Perhaps the ultimate in anti-reductionism, 'Pataphysics seeks no less than to view each event in the universe as completely unique, subject to no laws but its own. Variations on this theme were subsequently explored by the Argentinean writer [[Jorge Luis Borges]] in his story/mock-essay [[Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius]].
* {{Cite book |title=Pattern Classification |last1=Duda |first1=Richard O. |last2=Peter E. Hart |last3=David G. Stork |publisher=[[John Wiley & Sons|Wiley-Interscience]] |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-471-05669-0 |edition=2nd |pages=487–489}}

* {{Cite journal |last=Epstein |first=Robert |year=1984 |title=The Principle of Parsimony and Some Applications in Psychology |journal=Journal of Mind Behavior |volume=5 |pages=119–130}}
==See also==
* {{Cite journal |last1=Hoffmann |first1=Roald |last2=Vladimir I. Minkin |last3=Barry K. Carpenter |year=1997 |title=Ockham's Razor and Chemistry |url=http://www.hyle.org/journal/issues/3/hoffman.htm |journal=Hyle: International Journal for Philosophy of Chemistry |volume=3 |pages=3–28 |access-date=14 April 2006 |archive-date=14 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180714163131/http://www.hyle.org/journal/issues/3/hoffman.htm |url-status=live }}
{{Portal box|Thinking|Logic|Science}}
* {{Cite book |title=Philosophy of Mind |last=Jacquette |first=Dale |publisher=[[Prentice Hall]] |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-13-030933-4 |location=Engleswoods Cliffs, New Jersey |pages=34–36}}
{{columns-list|3|
* {{Cite book |url=http://omega.math.albany.edu:8008/JaynesBook.html |title=Probability Theory: The Logic of Science |last=Jaynes |first=Edwin Thompson |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-521-59271-0 |chapter=Model Comparison and Robustness |publisher=Cambridge University Press |author-link=Edwin Thompson Jaynes |chapter-url=http://omega.math.albany.edu:8008/ETJ-PS/cc24f.ps |access-date=24 November 2003 |archive-date=24 October 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181024011719/http://omega.math.albany.edu:8008/JaynesBook.html |url-status=live }}
* [[Algorithmic information theory]]
* {{Cite journal |last1=Jefferys |first1=William H. |last2=Berger, James O. |year=1991 |title=Ockham's Razor and Bayesian Statistics |journal=American Scientist |volume=80 |pages=64–72}} (Preprint available as "[http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/papers/ockham.pdf Sharpening Occam's Razor on a Bayesian Strop] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050304065538/http://quasar.as.utexas.edu/papers/ockham.pdf |date=4 March 2005 }}").
* [[Bayesian inference]]
* {{Cite book |title=Realistic Rationalism |last=Katz |first=Jerrold |publisher=MIT Press |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-262-11229-1}}
* [[Buridan's ass]]
* {{Cite book |title=The Development of Logic |last1=Kneale |first1=William |last2=Martha Kneale |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |year=1962 |isbn=978-0-19-824183-6 |location=London |page=243}}
* [[Ceteris paribus]]
* {{Cite book |url=http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/mackay/itila/book.html |title=Information Theory, Inference and Learning Algorithms |last=MacKay |first=David J. C. |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-521-64298-9 |bibcode=2003itil.book.....M |author-link=David J.C. MacKay |access-date=24 February 2016 |archive-date=17 February 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160217105359/http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/mackay/itila/book.html |url-status=live }}
* [[Common sense]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Maurer |first=A. |year=1984 |title=Ockham's Razor and Chatton's Anti-Razor |journal=Mediaeval Studies |volume=46 |pages=463–475 |doi=10.1484/J.MS.2.306670}}
* [[Cladistics]]
* {{Cite encyclopedia |year=2005 |title=Søren Kierkegaard |encyclopedia=[[Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]] |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kierkegaard/ |access-date=14 April 2006 |last=McDonald |first=William |archive-date=25 February 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170225014254/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kierkegaard/ |url-status=live }}
* [[Crabtree's Bludgeon]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Menger |first=Karl |year=1960 |title=A Counterpart of Ockham's Razor in Pure and Applied Mathematics: Ontological Uses |journal=Synthese |volume=12 |issue=4 |pages=415–428 |doi=10.1007/BF00485426|s2cid=46962297 }}
* [[Curve fitting]]
* {{Cite book |url=http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Morgan/Morgan_1903/Morgan_1903_toc.html |title=An Introduction to Comparative Psychology |last=Morgan |first=C. Lloyd |publisher=W. Scott |year=1903 |isbn=978-0-89093-171-4 |edition=2nd |location=London |page=59 |chapter=Other Minds than Ours |access-date=15 April 2006 |chapter-url=http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Morgan/Morgan_1903/Morgan_1903_03.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050412025647/http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Morgan/Morgan_1903/Morgan_1903_toc.html |archive-date=12 April 2005 |url-status=dead }}
* [[Data compression]]
* {{Cite book |title=Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica |title-link=Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica |last=Newton |first=Isaac |publisher=[[Henry Pemberton]] |year=2011 |isbn=978-1-60386-435-0 |edition=3rd |location=London |author-link=Isaac Newton |orig-year=1726}}
* [[Deus ex machina]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Nolan |first=D. |year=1997 |title=Quantitative Parsimony |journal=[[British Journal for the Philosophy of Science]] |volume=48 |issue=3 |pages=329–343 |doi=10.1093/bjps/48.3.329|s2cid=229320568 }}
* [[Eliminative materialism]]
* {{Cite book |title=Basic Writings of St. Thomas Aquinas |translator-last=Pegis |translator-first=A. C. |publisher=Random House |year=1945 |isbn=978-0-87220-380-8 |location=New York |page=129}}
* [[Egyptian fractions]]
* {{Cite book |title=The Logic of Scientific Discovery |last=Popper |first=Karl |publisher=Routledge |year=1992 |isbn=978-84-309-0711-3 |edition=2nd |location=London |pages=121–132 |chapter=7. Simplicity |orig-year=First composed 1934 (''Logik der Forschung'')}}
* [[Falsifiability]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Rodríguez-Fernández |first=J. L. |year=1999 |title=Ockham's Razor |journal=Endeavour |volume=23 |issue=3 |pages=121–125 |doi=10.1016/S0160-9327(99)01199-0}}
* [[Greedy reductionism]]
* {{Cite web |url=http://framingbusiness.net/php/2005/ockhamatheism.php |title=Ockham's Razor Suggests Atheism |last=Schmitt |first=Gavin C. |year=2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070211004045/http://framingbusiness.net/php/2005/ockhamatheism.php |archive-date=11 February 2007 |access-date=15 April 2006 }}
* [[Hanlon's razor]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Smart |first=J. J. C. |year=1959 |title=Sensations and Brain Processes |journal=[[The Philosophical Review]] |volume=68 |issue=2 |pages=141–156 |doi=10.2307/2182164 |jstor=2182164}}
* [[Isotelism]]
* {{Cite book |title=Simplicity |last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |year=1975 |location=Oxford}}
* [[KISS principle]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Sober |first=Elliott |year=1981 |title=The Principle of Parsimony |url=http://commonsenseatheism.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/Sober-The-Principle-of-Parsimony.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=British Journal for the Philosophy of Science |volume=32 |issue=2 |pages=145–156 |doi=10.1093/bjps/32.2.145 |s2cid=120916709 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111215051421/http://commonsenseatheism.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/Sober-The-Principle-of-Parsimony.pdf |archive-date=15 December 2011 |access-date=4 August 2012 }}
* [[Kolmogorov complexity]]
* {{Cite book |title=Explanation and its Limits |last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=1990 |editor-last=Dudley Knowles |location=Cambridge |pages=73–94 |chapter=Let's Razor Ockham's Razor}}
* [[Metaphysical naturalism]]
* {{Cite web |url=http://philosophy.wisc.edu/sober/TILBURG.pdf |title=What is the Problem of Simplicity? |last=Sober |first=Elliott |year=2002 |editor-last=Zellner |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061108113237/http://philosophy.wisc.edu/sober/TILBURG.pdf |archive-date=8 November 2006 |access-date=4 August 2012 |display-editors=etal }}
* [[Minimum description length]]
* {{Cite book |title=Ockham's Razors - A User's Manual | last=Sober |first=Elliott |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year= 2015 |isbn=978-1-107-06849--0 |location=Cambridge, England}}
* [[Minimum message length]]
* {{Cite book |title=Simplicity as Evidence for Truth |last=Swinburne |first=Richard |publisher=[[Marquette University Press]] |year=1997 |isbn=978-0-87462-164-8 |location=Milwaukee, Wisconsin}}
* [[Model selection]]
* {{Cite journal |last=Thorburn |first=W. M. |year=1918 |title=The Myth of Occam's Razor |url=http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Occam%27s_Razor |journal=Mind |volume=27 |issue=107 |pages=345–353 |doi=10.1093/mind/XXVII.3.345 |access-date=11 July 2009 |archive-date=5 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191005192629/https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Occam%27s_Razor |url-status=live }}
* [[Morgan's canon]]
* {{Cite book |title=Adaptation and natural selection: A Critique of some Current Evolutionary Thought |last=Williams |first=George C. |publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] |year=1966 |isbn=978-0-691-02615-2 |location=Princeton, New Jersey}}
* [[Murphy's law]]
* [[Occam programming language]]
* [[Overfitting]]
* [[Parsimony]]
* [[Philosophy of science]]
* [[Poverty of the stimulus]]
* [[Principle of least astonishment]]
* [[Rationalism]]
* [[Razor (philosophy)]]
* [[Reference class problem]]
* [[Scientific method]]
* [[Scientific reductionism]]
* [[Scientific skepticism]]
* [[Simplicity]]
* [[Turtles all the way down]]
* [[Plato's beard]]
}}

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}

==Further reading==
{{Refbegin|2}}
*{{Cite book
| last=Ariew
| first=Roger
| year=1976
| title=Ockham's Razor: A Historical and Philosophical Analysis of Ockham's Principle of Parsimony
| publisher=Champaign-Urbana, University of Illinois }}
*{{Cite journal
| last=Charlesworth
| first=M. J.
| title=Aristotle's Razor
| journal=Philosophical Studies (Ireland)
| year=1956
| volume=6
| pages=105–112 }}
*{{Cite book
| last=Churchland
| first=Paul M.
| authorlink=Paul Churchland
| year=1984
| title=Matter and Consciousness
| location=Cambridge, Massachusetts
| publisher=[[MIT Press]]
| id=ISBN
| isbn=0262530503 }}
*{{Cite book
| last=Crick
| first=Francis H. C.
| authorlink=Francis Crick
| year=1988
| title=What Mad Pursuit: A Personal View of Scientific Discovery
| location=New York, New York
| publisher=[[Basic Books]]
| id=ISBN
| isbn=0465091377 }}
*{{Cite journal
| last=Dowe
| first=David L.
| coauthors=Steve Gardner, Graham Oppy
| title=Bayes not Bust! Why Simplicity is no Problem for Bayesians
| journal=[http://bjps.oxfordjournals.org/ British J. for the Philosophy of Science]
| year=2007
| month=December
| volume=58
| pages=46pp
| url=http://bjps.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/axm033v1
| accessdate=2007-09-24
| doi=10.1093/bjps/axm033 }}
*{{Cite book
| last=Duda
| first=Richard O.
| coauthors=Peter E. Hart, David G. Stork
| year=2000
| title=Pattern Classification
| edition=2nd
| pages=487–489
| publisher=[[John Wiley & Sons|Wiley-Interscience]]
| id=ISBN
| isbn=0471056693 }}
*{{Cite journal
| last=Epstein
| first=Robert
| title=The Principle of Parsimony and Some Applications in Psychology
| journal=Journal of Mind Behavior
| year=1984
| volume=5
| pages=119–130 }}
*{{Cite journal
| last=Hoffmann
| first=Roald
| coauthors=Vladimir I. Minkin, Barry K. Carpenter
| title=Ockham's Razor and Chemistry
| journal=HYLE—International Journal for the Philosophy of Chemistry
| year=1997
| volume=3
| pages=3–28
| url=http://www.hyle.org/journal/issues/3/hoffman.htm
| accessdate=2006-04-14 }}
*{{Cite book
| last=Jacquette
| first=Dale
| year=1994
| title=Philosophy of Mind
| pages=34–36
| location=Engleswoods Cliffs, New Jersey
| publisher=[[Prentice Hall]]
| id=ISBN
| isbn=0130309338 }}
*{{Cite book
| last=Jaynes
| first=Edwin Thompson
| authorlink=Edwin Thompson Jaynes
| year=1994
| title=Probability Theory: The Logic of Science
| chapter=Model Comparison and Robustness
| chapterurl=http://omega.math.albany.edu:8008/ETJ-PS/cc24f.ps
| url=http://omega.math.albany.edu:8008/JaynesBook.html
| isbn=0521592712 }}
*{{Cite journal
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| year=2005
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*{{Cite book
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{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}


==External links==
== External links ==
{{commons category}}
* [http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/~dkoks/Faq/General/occam.html What is Occam's Razor?] This essay distinguishes Occam's Razor (used for theories with identical predictions) from the Principle of Parsimony (which can be applied to theories with different predictions).
{{Wikiquote|William of Occam}}
* [[Skeptic's Dictionary]]: [http://skepdic.com/occam.html ''Occam's Razor'']
{{wiktionary|Occam's razor|parsimony}}
* [http://www.galilean-library.org/manuscript.php?postid=43832 Ockham's Razor], an essay at The Galilean Library on the historical and philosophical implications by Paul Newall.
* [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007m0w4 Ockham's Razor], BBC Radio 4 discussion with Sir Anthony Kenny, Marilyn Adams & Richard Cross (''In Our Time'', 31 May 2007)
* [http://www.theness.com/articles.asp?id=71 The Razor in the Toolbox: The history, use, and abuse of Occam’s Razor], by [[New England Skeptical Society|Robert Novella]]
*[http://rii.ricoh.com/~stork/OccamWorkshop.html NIPS 2001 Workshop "Foundations of Occam's Razor and parsimony in learning"]
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/simplicity/ Simplicity at Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
* {{planetmath reference|id=6371|title=Occam's Razor}}
* [http://www.rainbowtel.net/~bryants/toothbrush.htm Humorous corollary "Rev. Nocents' Toothbrush" (science vs. religion)]
* [http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Sherlock_Hemlock_and_the_Great_Twiddlebug_Mystery Sherlock Hemlock from Sesame Street] – teaching Occam's razor to young children, Sherlock Hemlock comes up with a complex solution to a simple problem. But then reality proves him correct.


{{philosophy of religion}}
{{philosophy of religion}}
{{Catholic philosophy footer}}
{{Narrative}}
{{Philosophical logic}}


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[[Category:Adages]]
[[Category:Concepts in epistemology]]
[[Category:Reductionism]]
[[Category:Concepts in the philosophy of science]]
[[Category:Epistemology of science]]
[[Category:Heuristics]]
[[Category:Heuristics]]
[[Category:Principles]]
[[Category:Rules of thumb]]
[[Category:Critical thinking]]
[[Category:Occamism]]
[[Category:Philosophy of science]]
[[Category:Philosophical analogies]]
[[Category:Arguments against the existence of God]]
[[Category:Razors (philosophy)]]
[[Category:Eponyms]]

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[[ko:오컴의 면도날]]
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[[he:תערו של אוקאם]]
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Latest revision as of 09:56, 30 December 2024

In philosophy, Occam's razor (also spelled Ockham's razor or Ocham's razor; Latin: novacula Occami) is the problem-solving principle that recommends searching for explanations constructed with the smallest possible set of elements. It is also known as the principle of parsimony or the law of parsimony (Latin: lex parsimoniae). Attributed to William of Ockham, a 14th-century English philosopher and theologian, it is frequently cited as Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem, which translates as "Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity",[1][2] although Occam never used these exact words. Popularly, the principle is sometimes paraphrased as "of two competing theories, the simpler explanation of an entity is to be preferred."[3]

This philosophical razor advocates that when presented with competing hypotheses about the same prediction and both hypotheses have equal explanatory power, one should prefer the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions,[4] and that this is not meant to be a way of choosing between hypotheses that make different predictions. Similarly, in science, Occam's razor is used as an abductive heuristic in the development of theoretical models rather than as a rigorous arbiter between candidate models.[5][6]

History

[edit]

The phrase Occam's razor did not appear until a few centuries after William of Ockham's death in 1347. Libert Froidmont, in his On Christian Philosophy of the Soul, gives him credit for the phrase, speaking of "novacula occami".[7] Ockham did not invent this principle, but its fame—and its association with him—may be due to the frequency and effectiveness with which he used it.[8] Ockham stated the principle in various ways, but the most popular version, "Entities are not to be multiplied without necessity" (Non sunt multiplicanda entia sine necessitate) was formulated by the Irish Franciscan philosopher John Punch in his 1639 commentary on the works of Duns Scotus.[9]

Formulations before William of Ockham

[edit]
Part of a page from John Duns Scotus's book Commentaria oxoniensia ad IV libros magistri Sententiarus, showing the words: "Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate", i.e., "Plurality is not to be posited without necessity"

The origins of what has come to be known as Occam's razor are traceable to the works of earlier philosophers such as John Duns Scotus (1265–1308), Robert Grosseteste (1175–1253), Maimonides (Moses ben-Maimon, 1138–1204), and even Aristotle (384–322 BC).[10][11] Aristotle writes in his Posterior Analytics, "We may assume the superiority ceteris paribus [other things being equal] of the demonstration which derives from fewer postulates or hypotheses." Ptolemy (c. AD 90 – c. 168) stated, "We consider it a good principle to explain the phenomena by the simplest hypothesis possible."[12]

Phrases such as "It is vain to do with more what can be done with fewer" and "A plurality is not to be posited without necessity" were commonplace in 13th-century scholastic writing.[12] Robert Grosseteste, in Commentary on [Aristotle's] the Posterior Analytics Books (Commentarius in Posteriorum Analyticorum Libros) (c. 1217–1220), declares: "That is better and more valuable which requires fewer, other circumstances being equal... For if one thing were demonstrated from many and another thing from fewer equally known premises, clearly that is better which is from fewer because it makes us know quickly, just as a universal demonstration is better than particular because it produces knowledge from fewer premises. Similarly in natural science, in moral science, and in metaphysics the best is that which needs no premises and the better that which needs the fewer, other circumstances being equal."[13]

The Summa Theologica of Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) states that "it is superfluous to suppose that what can be accounted for by a few principles has been produced by many." Aquinas uses this principle to construct an objection to God's existence, an objection that he in turn answers and refutes generally (cf. quinque viae), and specifically, through an argument based on causality.[14] Hence, Aquinas acknowledges the principle that today is known as Occam's razor, but prefers causal explanations to other simple explanations (cf. also Correlation does not imply causation).

William of Ockham

[edit]
Manuscript illustration of William of Ockham

William of Ockham (circa 1287–1347) was an English Franciscan friar and theologian, an influential medieval philosopher and a nominalist. His popular fame as a great logician rests chiefly on the maxim attributed to him and known as Occam's razor. The term razor refers to distinguishing between two hypotheses either by "shaving away" unnecessary assumptions or cutting apart two similar conclusions.

While it has been claimed that Occam's razor is not found in any of William's writings,[15] one can cite statements such as Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate ("Plurality must never be posited without necessity"), which occurs in his theological work on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (Quaestiones et decisiones in quattuor libros Sententiarum Petri Lombardi; ed. Lugd., 1495, i, dist. 27, qu. 2, K).

Nevertheless, the precise words sometimes attributed to William of Ockham, Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem (Entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity),[16] are absent in his extant works;[17] this particular phrasing comes from John Punch,[18] who described the principle as a "common axiom" (axioma vulgare) of the Scholastics.[9] William of Ockham himself seems to restrict the operation of this principle in matters pertaining to miracles and God's power, considering a plurality of miracles possible in the Eucharist[further explanation needed] simply because it pleases God.[12]

This principle is sometimes phrased as Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate ("Plurality should not be posited without necessity").[19] In his Summa Totius Logicae, i. 12, William of Ockham cites the principle of economy, Frustra fit per plura quod potest fieri per pauciora ("It is futile to do with more things that which can be done with fewer"; Thorburn, 1918, pp. 352–53; Kneale and Kneale, 1962, p. 243.)

Later formulations

[edit]

To quote Isaac Newton, "We are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances. Therefore, to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes."[20][21] In the sentence hypotheses non fingo, Newton affirms the success of this approach.

Bertrand Russell offers a particular version of Occam's razor: "Whenever possible, substitute constructions out of known entities for inferences to unknown entities."[22]

Around 1960, Ray Solomonoff founded the theory of universal inductive inference, the theory of prediction based on observations – for example, predicting the next symbol based upon a given series of symbols. The only assumption is that the environment follows some unknown but computable probability distribution. This theory is a mathematical formalization of Occam's razor.[23][24][25]

Another technical approach to Occam's razor is ontological parsimony.[26] Parsimony means spareness and is also referred to as the Rule of Simplicity. This is considered a strong version of Occam's razor.[27][28] A variation used in medicine is called the "Zebra": a physician should reject an exotic medical diagnosis when a more commonplace explanation is more likely, derived from Theodore Woodward's dictum "When you hear hoofbeats, think of horses not zebras".[29]

Ernst Mach formulated the stronger version of Occam's razor into physics, which he called the Principle of Economy stating: "Scientists must use the simplest means of arriving at their results and exclude everything not perceived by the senses."[30]

This principle goes back at least as far as Aristotle, who wrote "Nature operates in the shortest way possible."[27] The idea of parsimony or simplicity in deciding between theories, though not the intent of the original expression of Occam's razor, has been assimilated into common culture as the widespread layman's formulation that "the simplest explanation is usually the correct one."[27]

Justifications

[edit]

Aesthetic

[edit]

Prior to the 20th century, it was a commonly held belief that nature itself was simple and that simpler hypotheses about nature were thus more likely to be true. This notion was deeply rooted in the aesthetic value that simplicity holds for human thought and the justifications presented for it often drew from theology.[clarification needed] Thomas Aquinas made this argument in the 13th century, writing, "If a thing can be done adequately by means of one, it is superfluous to do it by means of several; for we observe that nature does not employ two instruments [if] one suffices."[31]

Beginning in the 20th century, epistemological justifications based on induction, logic, pragmatism, and especially probability theory have become more popular among philosophers.[7]

Empirical

[edit]

Occam's razor has gained strong empirical support in helping to converge on better theories (see Uses section below for some examples).

In the related concept of overfitting, excessively complex models are affected by statistical noise (a problem also known as the bias–variance tradeoff), whereas simpler models may capture the underlying structure better and may thus have better predictive performance. It is, however, often difficult to deduce which part of the data is noise (cf. model selection, test set, minimum description length, Bayesian inference, etc.).

Testing the razor

[edit]

The razor's statement that "other things being equal, simpler explanations are generally better than more complex ones" is amenable to empirical testing. Another interpretation of the razor's statement would be that "simpler hypotheses are generally better than the complex ones". The procedure to test the former interpretation would compare the track records of simple and comparatively complex explanations. If one accepts the first interpretation, the validity of Occam's razor as a tool would then have to be rejected if the more complex explanations were more often correct than the less complex ones (while the converse would lend support to its use). If the latter interpretation is accepted, the validity of Occam's razor as a tool could possibly be accepted if the simpler hypotheses led to correct conclusions more often than not.

Even if some increases in complexity are sometimes necessary, there still remains a justified general bias toward the simpler of two competing explanations. To understand why, consider that for each accepted explanation of a phenomenon, there is always an infinite number of possible, more complex, and ultimately incorrect, alternatives. This is so because one can always burden a failing explanation with an ad hoc hypothesis. Ad hoc hypotheses are justifications that prevent theories from being falsified.

Possible explanations can become needlessly complex. It might be coherent, for instance, to add the involvement of leprechauns to any explanation, but Occam's razor would prevent such additions unless they were necessary.

For example, if a man, accused of breaking a vase, makes supernatural claims that leprechauns were responsible for the breakage, a simple explanation might be that the man did it, but ongoing ad hoc justifications (e.g., "... and that's not me breaking it on the film; they tampered with that, too") could successfully prevent complete disproof. This endless supply of elaborate competing explanations, called saving hypotheses, cannot be technically ruled out – except by using Occam's razor.[32][33][34]

Any more complex theory might still possibly be true. A study of the predictive validity of Occam's razor found 32 published papers that included 97 comparisons of economic forecasts from simple and complex forecasting methods. None of the papers provided a balance of evidence that complexity of method improved forecast accuracy. In the 25 papers with quantitative comparisons, complexity increased forecast errors by an average of 27 percent.[35]

Practical considerations and pragmatism

[edit]

Mathematical

[edit]

One justification of Occam's razor is a direct result of basic probability theory. By definition, all assumptions introduce possibilities for error; if an assumption does not improve the accuracy of a theory, its only effect is to increase the probability that the overall theory is wrong.

There have also been other attempts to derive Occam's razor from probability theory, including notable attempts made by Harold Jeffreys and E. T. Jaynes. The probabilistic (Bayesian) basis for Occam's razor is elaborated by David J. C. MacKay in chapter 28 of his book Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms,[36] where he emphasizes that a prior bias in favor of simpler models is not required.

William H. Jefferys and James O. Berger (1991) generalize and quantify the original formulation's "assumptions" concept as the degree to which a proposition is unnecessarily accommodating to possible observable data.[37] They state, "A hypothesis with fewer adjustable parameters will automatically have an enhanced posterior probability, due to the fact that the predictions it makes are sharp."[37] The use of "sharp" here is not only a tongue-in-cheek reference to the idea of a razor, but also indicates that such predictions are more accurate than competing predictions. The model they propose balances the precision of a theory's predictions against their sharpness, preferring theories that sharply make correct predictions over theories that accommodate a wide range of other possible results. This, again, reflects the mathematical relationship between key concepts in Bayesian inference (namely marginal probability, conditional probability, and posterior probability).

The bias–variance tradeoff is a framework that incorporates the Occam's razor principle in its balance between overfitting (associated with lower bias but higher variance) and underfitting (associated with lower variance but higher bias).[38]

Other philosophers

[edit]

Karl Popper

[edit]

Karl Popper argues that a preference for simple theories need not appeal to practical or aesthetic considerations. Our preference for simplicity may be justified by its falsifiability criterion: we prefer simpler theories to more complex ones "because their empirical content is greater; and because they are better testable".[39] The idea here is that a simple theory applies to more cases than a more complex one, and is thus more easily falsifiable. This is again comparing a simple theory to a more complex theory where both explain the data equally well.

Elliott Sober

[edit]

The philosopher of science Elliott Sober once argued along the same lines as Popper, tying simplicity with "informativeness": The simplest theory is the more informative, in the sense that it requires less information to a question.[40] He has since rejected this account of simplicity, purportedly because it fails to provide an epistemic justification for simplicity. He now believes that simplicity considerations (and considerations of parsimony in particular) do not count unless they reflect something more fundamental. Philosophers, he suggests, may have made the error of hypostatizing simplicity (i.e., endowed it with a sui generis existence), when it has meaning only when embedded in a specific context (Sober 1992). If we fail to justify simplicity considerations on the basis of the context in which we use them, we may have no non-circular justification: "Just as the question 'why be rational?' may have no non-circular answer, the same may be true of the question 'why should simplicity be considered in evaluating the plausibility of hypotheses?'"[41]

Richard Swinburne

[edit]

Richard Swinburne argues for simplicity on logical grounds:

... the simplest hypothesis proposed as an explanation of phenomena is more likely to be the true one than is any other available hypothesis, that its predictions are more likely to be true than those of any other available hypothesis, and that it is an ultimate a priori epistemic principle that simplicity is evidence for truth.

— Swinburne 1997

According to Swinburne, since our choice of theory cannot be determined by data (see Underdetermination and Duhem–Quine thesis), we must rely on some criterion to determine which theory to use. Since it is absurd to have no logical method for settling on one hypothesis amongst an infinite number of equally data-compliant hypotheses, we should choose the simplest theory: "Either science is irrational [in the way it judges theories and predictions probable] or the principle of simplicity is a fundamental synthetic a priori truth."[42]

Ludwig Wittgenstein

[edit]

From the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus:

  • 3.328 "If a sign is not necessary then it is meaningless. That is the meaning of Occam's Razor."
(If everything in the symbolism works as though a sign had meaning, then it has meaning.)
  • 4.04 "In the proposition, there must be exactly as many things distinguishable as there are in the state of affairs, which it represents. They must both possess the same logical (mathematical) multiplicity (cf. Hertz's Mechanics, on Dynamic Models)."
  • 5.47321 "Occam's Razor is, of course, not an arbitrary rule nor one justified by its practical success. It simply says that unnecessary elements in a symbolism mean nothing. Signs which serve one purpose are logically equivalent; signs which serve no purpose are logically meaningless."

and on the related concept of "simplicity":

  • 6.363 "The procedure of induction consists in accepting as true the simplest law that can be reconciled with our experiences."

Uses

[edit]

Science and the scientific method

[edit]
Andreas Cellarius's illustration of the Copernican system, from the Harmonia Macrocosmica (1660). Future positions of the sun, moon and other solar system bodies can be calculated using a geocentric model (the earth is at the centre) or using a heliocentric model (the sun is at the centre). Both work, but the geocentric model requires a much more complex system of calculations than the heliocentric model. This was pointed out in a preface to Copernicus's first edition of De revolutionibus orbium coelestium.

In science, Occam's razor is used as a heuristic to guide scientists in developing theoretical models rather than as an arbiter between published models.[5][6] In physics, parsimony was an important heuristic in the development and application of the principle of least action by Pierre Louis Maupertuis and Leonhard Euler,[43] in Albert Einstein's formulation of special relativity,[44][45] and in the development of quantum mechanics by Max Planck, Werner Heisenberg and Louis de Broglie.[6][46]

In chemistry, Occam's razor is often an important heuristic when developing a model of a reaction mechanism.[47][48] Although it is useful as a heuristic in developing models of reaction mechanisms, it has been shown to fail as a criterion for selecting among some selected published models.[6] In this context, Einstein himself expressed caution when he formulated Einstein's Constraint: "It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience."[49][50][51] An often-quoted version of this constraint (which cannot be verified as posited by Einstein himself)[52] reduces this to "Everything should be kept as simple as possible, but not simpler."

In the scientific method, Occam's razor is not considered an irrefutable principle of logic or a scientific result; the preference for simplicity in the scientific method is based on the falsifiability criterion. For each accepted explanation of a phenomenon, there may be an extremely large, perhaps even incomprehensible, number of possible and more complex alternatives. Since failing explanations can always be burdened with ad hoc hypotheses to prevent them from being falsified, simpler theories are preferable to more complex ones because they tend to be more testable.[53][54][55] As a logical principle, Occam's razor would demand that scientists accept the simplest possible theoretical explanation for existing data. However, science has shown repeatedly that future data often support more complex theories than do existing data. Science prefers the simplest explanation that is consistent with the data available at a given time, but the simplest explanation may be ruled out as new data become available.[5][54] That is, science is open to the possibility that future experiments might support more complex theories than demanded by current data and is more interested in designing experiments to discriminate between competing theories than favoring one theory over another based merely on philosophical principles.[53][54][55]

When scientists use the idea of parsimony, it has meaning only in a very specific context of inquiry. Several background assumptions are required for parsimony to connect with plausibility in a particular research problem.[clarification needed] The reasonableness of parsimony in one research context may have nothing to do with its reasonableness in another. It is a mistake to think that there is a single global principle that spans diverse subject matter.[55]

It has been suggested that Occam's razor is a widely accepted example of extraevidential consideration, even though it is entirely a metaphysical assumption. Most of the time, however, Occam's razor is a conservative tool, cutting out "crazy, complicated constructions" and assuring "that hypotheses are grounded in the science of the day", thus yielding "normal" science: models of explanation and prediction.[6] There are, however, notable exceptions where Occam's razor turns a conservative scientist into a reluctant revolutionary. For example, Max Planck interpolated between the Wien and Jeans radiation laws and used Occam's razor logic to formulate the quantum hypothesis, even resisting that hypothesis as it became more obvious that it was correct.[6]

Appeals to simplicity were used to argue against the phenomena of meteorites, ball lightning, continental drift, and reverse transcriptase.[56] One can argue for atomic building blocks for matter, because it provides a simpler explanation for the observed reversibility of both mixing[clarification needed] and chemical reactions as simple separation and rearrangements of atomic building blocks. At the time, however, the atomic theory was considered more complex because it implied the existence of invisible particles that had not been directly detected. Ernst Mach and the logical positivists rejected John Dalton's atomic theory until the reality of atoms was more evident in Brownian motion, as shown by Albert Einstein.[57]

In the same way, postulating the aether is more complex than transmission of light through a vacuum. At the time, however, all known waves propagated through a physical medium, and it seemed simpler to postulate the existence of a medium than to theorize about wave propagation without a medium. Likewise, Isaac Newton's idea of light particles seemed simpler than Christiaan Huygens's idea of waves, so many favored it. In this case, as it turned out, neither the wave—nor the particle—explanation alone suffices, as light behaves like waves and like particles.

Three axioms presupposed by the scientific method are realism (the existence of objective reality), the existence of natural laws, and the constancy of natural law. Rather than depend on provability of these axioms, science depends on the fact that they have not been objectively falsified. Occam's razor and parsimony support, but do not prove, these axioms of science. The general principle of science is that theories (or models) of natural law must be consistent with repeatable experimental observations. This ultimate arbiter (selection criterion) rests upon the axioms mentioned above.[54]

If multiple models of natural law make exactly the same testable predictions, they are equivalent and there is no need for parsimony to choose a preferred one. For example, Newtonian, Hamiltonian and Lagrangian classical mechanics are equivalent. Physicists have no interest in using Occam's razor to say the other two are wrong. Likewise, there is no demand for simplicity principles to arbitrate between wave and matrix formulations of quantum mechanics. Science often does not demand arbitration or selection criteria between models that make the same testable predictions.[54]

Biology

[edit]

Biologists or philosophers of biology use Occam's razor in either of two contexts both in evolutionary biology: the units of selection controversy and systematics. George C. Williams in his book Adaptation and Natural Selection (1966) argues that the best way to explain altruism among animals is based on low-level (i.e., individual) selection as opposed to high-level group selection. Altruism is defined by some evolutionary biologists (e.g., R. Alexander, 1987; W. D. Hamilton, 1964) as behavior that is beneficial to others (or to the group) at a cost to the individual, and many posit individual selection as the mechanism that explains altruism solely in terms of the behaviors of individual organisms acting in their own self-interest (or in the interest of their genes, via kin selection). Williams was arguing against the perspective of others who propose selection at the level of the group as an evolutionary mechanism that selects for altruistic traits (e.g., D. S. Wilson & E. O. Wilson, 2007). The basis for Williams's contention is that of the two, individual selection is the more parsimonious theory. In doing so he is invoking a variant of Occam's razor known as Morgan's Canon: "In no case is an animal activity to be interpreted in terms of higher psychological processes, if it can be fairly interpreted in terms of processes which stand lower in the scale of psychological evolution and development." (Morgan 1903).

However, more recent biological analyses, such as Richard Dawkins's The Selfish Gene, have contended that Morgan's Canon is not the simplest and most basic explanation. Dawkins argues the way evolution works is that the genes propagated in most copies end up determining the development of that particular species, i.e., natural selection turns out to select specific genes, and this is really the fundamental underlying principle that automatically gives individual and group selection as emergent features of evolution.

Zoology provides an example. Muskoxen, when threatened by wolves, form a circle with the males on the outside and the females and young on the inside. This is an example of a behavior by the males that seems to be altruistic. The behavior is disadvantageous to them individually but beneficial to the group as a whole; thus, it was seen by some to support the group selection theory. Another interpretation is kin selection: if the males are protecting their offspring, they are protecting copies of their own alleles. Engaging in this behavior would be favored by individual selection if the cost to the male musk ox is less than half of the benefit received by his calf – which could easily be the case if wolves have an easier time killing calves than adult males. It could also be the case that male musk oxen would be individually less likely to be killed by wolves if they stood in a circle with their horns pointing out, regardless of whether they were protecting the females and offspring. That would be an example of regular natural selection – a phenomenon called "the selfish herd".

Systematics is the branch of biology that attempts to establish patterns of relationship among biological taxa, today generally thought to reflect evolutionary history. It is also concerned with their classification. There are three primary camps in systematics: cladists, pheneticists, and evolutionary taxonomists. Cladists hold that classification should be based on synapomorphies (shared, derived character states), pheneticists contend that overall similarity (synapomorphies and complementary symplesiomorphies) is the determining criterion, while evolutionary taxonomists say that both genealogy and similarity count in classification (in a manner determined by the evolutionary taxonomist).[58][59]

It is among the cladists that Occam's razor is applied, through the method of cladistic parsimony. Cladistic parsimony (or maximum parsimony) is a method of phylogenetic inference that yields phylogenetic trees (more specifically, cladograms). Cladograms are branching, diagrams used to represent hypotheses of relative degree of relationship, based on synapomorphies. Cladistic parsimony is used to select as the preferred hypothesis of relationships the cladogram that requires the fewest implied character state transformations (or smallest weight, if characters are differentially weighted). Critics of the cladistic approach often observe that for some types of data, parsimony could produce the wrong results, regardless of how much data is collected (this is called statistical inconsistency, or long branch attraction). However, this criticism is also potentially true for any type of phylogenetic inference, unless the model used to estimate the tree reflects the way that evolution actually happened. Because this information is not empirically accessible, the criticism of statistical inconsistency against parsimony holds no force.[60] For a book-length treatment of cladistic parsimony, see Elliott Sober's Reconstructing the Past: Parsimony, Evolution, and Inference (1988). For a discussion of both uses of Occam's razor in biology, see Sober's article "Let's Razor Ockham's Razor" (1990).

Other methods for inferring evolutionary relationships use parsimony in a more general way. Likelihood methods for phylogeny use parsimony as they do for all likelihood tests, with hypotheses requiring fewer differing parameters (i.e., numbers or different rates of character change or different frequencies of character state transitions) being treated as null hypotheses relative to hypotheses requiring more differing parameters. Thus, complex hypotheses must predict data much better than do simple hypotheses before researchers reject the simple hypotheses. Recent advances employ information theory, a close cousin of likelihood, which uses Occam's razor in the same way. The choice of the "shortest tree" relative to a not-so-short tree under any optimality criterion (smallest distance, fewest steps, or maximum likelihood) is always based on parsimony.[61]

Francis Crick has commented on potential limitations of Occam's razor in biology. He advances the argument that because biological systems are the products of (an ongoing) natural selection, the mechanisms are not necessarily optimal in an obvious sense. He cautions: "While Ockham's razor is a useful tool in the physical sciences, it can be a very dangerous implement in biology. It is thus very rash to use simplicity and elegance as a guide in biological research."[62] This is an ontological critique of parsimony.

In biogeography, parsimony is used to infer ancient vicariant events or migrations of species or populations by observing the geographic distribution and relationships of existing organisms. Given the phylogenetic tree, ancestral population subdivisions are inferred to be those that require the minimum amount of change.[citation needed]

Religion

[edit]

In the philosophy of religion, Occam's razor is sometimes applied to the existence of God. William of Ockham himself was a Christian. He believed in God, and in the authority of Christian scripture; he writes that "nothing ought to be posited without a reason given, unless it is self-evident (literally, known through itself) or known by experience or proved by the authority of Sacred Scripture."[63] Ockham believed that an explanation has no sufficient basis in reality when it does not harmonize with reason, experience, or the Bible. Unlike many theologians of his time, though, Ockham did not believe God could be logically proven with arguments. To Ockham, science was a matter of discovery; theology was a matter of revelation and faith. He states: "Only faith gives us access to theological truths. The ways of God are not open to reason, for God has freely chosen to create a world and establish a way of salvation within it apart from any necessary laws that human logic or rationality can uncover."[64]

Thomas Aquinas, in the Summa Theologica, uses a formulation of Occam's razor to construct an objection to the idea that God exists, which he refutes directly with a counterargument:[65]

Further, it is superfluous to suppose that what can be accounted for by a few principles has been produced by many. But it seems that everything we see in the world can be accounted for by other principles, supposing God did not exist. For all natural things can be reduced to one principle which is nature; and all voluntary things can be reduced to one principle which is human reason, or will. Therefore there is no need to suppose God's existence.

In turn, Aquinas answers this with the quinque viae, and addresses the particular objection above with the following answer:

Since nature works for a determinate end under the direction of a higher agent, whatever is done by nature must needs be traced back to God, as to its first cause. So also whatever is done voluntarily must also be traced back to some higher cause other than human reason or will, since these can change or fail; for all things that are changeable and capable of defect must be traced back to an immovable and self-necessary first principle, as was shown in the body of the Article.

Rather than argue for the necessity of a god, some theists base their belief upon grounds independent of, or prior to, reason, making Occam's razor irrelevant. This was the stance of Søren Kierkegaard, who viewed belief in God as a leap of faith that sometimes directly opposed reason.[66] This is also the doctrine of Gordon Clark's presuppositional apologetics, with the exception that Clark never thought the leap of faith was contrary to reason (see also Fideism).

Various arguments in favor of God establish God as a useful or even necessary assumption. Contrastingly some anti-theists hold firmly to the belief that assuming the existence of God introduces unnecessary complexity (e.g., the Ultimate Boeing 747 gambit from Dawkins's The God Delusion[67]).[68]

Another application of the principle is to be found in the work of George Berkeley (1685–1753). Berkeley was an idealist who believed that all of reality could be explained in terms of the mind alone. He invoked Occam's razor against materialism, stating that matter was not required by his metaphysics and was thus eliminable. One potential problem with this belief[for whom?] is that it's possible, given Berkeley's position, to find solipsism itself more in line with the razor than a God-mediated world beyond a single thinker.

Occam's razor may also be recognized in the apocryphal story about an exchange between Pierre-Simon Laplace and Napoleon. It is said that in praising Laplace for one of his recent publications, the emperor asked how it was that the name of God, which featured so frequently in the writings of Lagrange, appeared nowhere in Laplace's. At that, he is said to have replied, "It's because I had no need of that hypothesis."[69] Though some points of this story illustrate Laplace's atheism, more careful consideration suggests that he may instead have intended merely to illustrate the power of methodological naturalism, or even simply that the fewer logical premises one assumes, the stronger is one's conclusion.

Philosophy of mind

[edit]

In his article "Sensations and Brain Processes" (1959), J. J. C. Smart invoked Occam's razor with the aim to justify his preference of the mind-brain identity theory over spirit-body dualism. Dualists state that there are two kinds of substances in the universe: physical (including the body) and spiritual, which is non-physical. In contrast, identity theorists state that everything is physical, including consciousness, and that there is nothing nonphysical. Though it is impossible to appreciate the spiritual when limiting oneself to the physical,[citation needed] Smart maintained that identity theory explains all phenomena by assuming only a physical reality. Subsequently, Smart has been severely criticized for his use (or misuse) of Occam's razor and ultimately retracted his advocacy of it in this context. Paul Churchland (1984) states that by itself Occam's razor is inconclusive regarding duality. In a similar way, Dale Jacquette (1994) stated that Occam's razor has been used in attempts to justify eliminativism and reductionism in the philosophy of mind. Eliminativism is the thesis that the ontology of folk psychology including such entities as "pain", "joy", "desire", "fear", etc., are eliminable in favor of an ontology of a completed neuroscience.

Penal ethics

[edit]

In penal theory and the philosophy of punishment, parsimony refers specifically to taking care in the distribution of punishment in order to avoid excessive punishment. In the utilitarian approach to the philosophy of punishment, Jeremy Bentham's "parsimony principle" states that any punishment greater than is required to achieve its end is unjust. The concept is related but not identical to the legal concept of proportionality. Parsimony is a key consideration of the modern restorative justice, and is a component of utilitarian approaches to punishment, as well as the prison abolition movement. Bentham believed that true parsimony would require punishment to be individualised to take account of the sensibility of the individual—an individual more sensitive to punishment should be given a proportionately lesser one, since otherwise needless pain would be inflicted. Later utilitarian writers have tended to abandon this idea, in large part due to the impracticality of determining each alleged criminal's relative sensitivity to specific punishments.[70]

Probability theory and statistics

[edit]

Marcus Hutter's universal artificial intelligence builds upon Solomonoff's mathematical formalization of the razor to calculate the expected value of an action.

There are various papers in scholarly journals deriving formal versions of Occam's razor from probability theory, applying it in statistical inference, and using it to come up with criteria for penalizing complexity in statistical inference. Papers[71][72] have suggested a connection between Occam's razor and Kolmogorov complexity.[73]

One of the problems with the original formulation of the razor is that it only applies to models with the same explanatory power (i.e., it only tells us to prefer the simplest of equally good models). A more general form of the razor can be derived from Bayesian model comparison, which is based on Bayes factors and can be used to compare models that do not fit the observations equally well. These methods can sometimes optimally balance the complexity and power of a model. Generally, the exact Occam factor is intractable, but approximations such as Akaike information criterion, Bayesian information criterion, Variational Bayesian methods, false discovery rate, and Laplace's method are used. Many artificial intelligence researchers are now employing such techniques, for instance through work on Occam Learning or more generally on the Free energy principle.

Statistical versions of Occam's razor have a more rigorous formulation than what philosophical discussions produce. In particular, they must have a specific definition of the term simplicity, and that definition can vary. For example, in the KolmogorovChaitin minimum description length approach, the subject must pick a Turing machine whose operations describe the basic operations believed to represent "simplicity" by the subject. However, one could always choose a Turing machine with a simple operation that happened to construct one's entire theory and would hence score highly under the razor. This has led to two opposing camps: one that believes Occam's razor is objective, and one that believes it is subjective.

Objective razor

[edit]

The minimum instruction set of a universal Turing machine requires approximately the same length description across different formulations, and is small compared to the Kolmogorov complexity of most practical theories. Marcus Hutter has used this consistency to define a "natural" Turing machine of small size as the proper basis for excluding arbitrarily complex instruction sets in the formulation of razors.[74] Describing the program for the universal program as the "hypothesis", and the representation of the evidence as program data, it has been formally proven under Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory that "the sum of the log universal probability of the model plus the log of the probability of the data given the model should be minimized."[75] Interpreting this as minimising the total length of a two-part message encoding model followed by data given model gives us the minimum message length (MML) principle.[71][72]

One possible conclusion from mixing the concepts of Kolmogorov complexity and Occam's razor is that an ideal data compressor would also be a scientific explanation/formulation generator. Some attempts have been made to re-derive known laws from considerations of simplicity or compressibility.[24][76]

According to Jürgen Schmidhuber, the appropriate mathematical theory of Occam's razor already exists, namely, Solomonoff's theory of optimal inductive inference[77] and its extensions.[78] See discussions in David L. Dowe's "Foreword re C. S. Wallace"[79] for the subtle distinctions between the algorithmic probability work of Solomonoff and the MML work of Chris Wallace, and see Dowe's "MML, hybrid Bayesian network graphical models, statistical consistency, invariance and uniqueness"[80] both for such discussions and for (in section 4) discussions of MML and Occam's razor. For a specific example of MML as Occam's razor in the problem of decision tree induction, see Dowe and Needham's "Message Length as an Effective Ockham's Razor in Decision Tree Induction".[81]

Mathematical arguments against Occam's razor

[edit]

The no free lunch (NFL) theorems for inductive inference prove that Occam's razor must rely on ultimately arbitrary assumptions concerning the prior probability distribution found in our world.[82] Specifically, suppose one is given two inductive inference algorithms, A and B, where A is a Bayesian procedure based on the choice of some prior distribution motivated by Occam's razor (e.g., the prior might favor hypotheses with smaller Kolmogorov complexity). Suppose that B is the anti-Bayes procedure, which calculates what the Bayesian algorithm A based on Occam's razor will predict – and then predicts the exact opposite. Then there are just as many actual priors (including those different from the Occam's razor prior assumed by A) in which algorithm B outperforms A as priors in which the procedure A based on Occam's razor comes out on top. In particular, the NFL theorems show that the "Occam factors" Bayesian argument for Occam's razor must make ultimately arbitrary modeling assumptions.[83]

Software development

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In software development, the rule of least power argues the correct programming language to use is the one that is simplest while also solving the targeted software problem. In that form the rule is often credited to Tim Berners-Lee since it appeared in his design guidelines for the original Hypertext Transfer Protocol.[84] Complexity in this context is measured either by placing a language into the Chomsky hierarchy or by listing idiomatic features of the language and comparing according to some agreed to scale of difficulties between idioms. Many languages once thought to be of lower complexity have evolved or later been discovered to be more complex than originally intended; so, in practice this rule is applied to the relative ease of a programmer to obtain the power of the language, rather than the precise theoretical limits of the language.

Controversial aspects

[edit]

Occam's razor is not an embargo against the positing of any kind of entity, or a recommendation of the simplest theory come what may.[a] Occam's razor is used to adjudicate between theories that have already passed "theoretical scrutiny" tests and are equally well-supported by evidence.[b] Furthermore, it may be used to prioritize empirical testing between two equally plausible but unequally testable hypotheses; thereby minimizing costs and wastes while increasing chances of falsification of the simpler-to-test hypothesis.[citation needed]

Another contentious aspect of the razor is that a theory can become more complex in terms of its structure (or syntax), while its ontology (or semantics) becomes simpler, or vice versa.[c] Quine, in a discussion on definition, referred to these two perspectives as "economy of practical expression" and "economy in grammar and vocabulary", respectively.[86]

Galileo Galilei lampooned the misuse of Occam's razor in his Dialogue. The principle is represented in the dialogue by Simplicio. The telling point that Galileo presented ironically was that if one really wanted to start from a small number of entities, one could always consider the letters of the alphabet as the fundamental entities, since one could construct the whole of human knowledge out of them.

Instances of using Occam's razor to justify belief in less complex and more simple theories have been criticized as using the razor inappropriately. For instance Francis Crick stated that "While Occam's razor is a useful tool in the physical sciences, it can be a very dangerous implement in biology. It is thus very rash to use simplicity and elegance as a guide in biological research."[87]

Anti-razors

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Occam's razor has met some opposition from people who consider it too extreme or rash. Walter Chatton (c. 1290–1343) was a contemporary of William of Ockham who took exception to Occam's razor and Ockham's use of it. In response he devised his own anti-razor: "If three things are not enough to verify an affirmative proposition about things, a fourth must be added and so on." Although there have been several philosophers who have formulated similar anti-razors since Chatton's time, no one anti-razor has perpetuated as notably as Chatton's anti-razor, although this could be the case of the Late Renaissance Italian motto of unknown attribution Se non è vero, è ben trovato ("Even if it is not true, it is well conceived") when referred to a particularly artful explanation.

Anti-razors have also been created by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716), Immanuel Kant (1724–1804), and Karl Menger (1902–1985). Leibniz's version took the form of a principle of plenitude, as Arthur Lovejoy has called it: the idea being that God created the most varied and populous of possible worlds. Kant felt a need to moderate the effects of Occam's razor and thus created his own counter-razor: "The variety of beings should not rashly be diminished."[88]

Karl Menger found mathematicians to be too parsimonious with regard to variables so he formulated his Law Against Miserliness, which took one of two forms: "Entities must not be reduced to the point of inadequacy" and "It is vain to do with fewer what requires more." A less serious but even more extremist anti-razor is 'Pataphysics, the "science of imaginary solutions" developed by Alfred Jarry (1873–1907). Perhaps the ultimate in anti-reductionism, "'Pataphysics seeks no less than to view each event in the universe as completely unique, subject to no laws but its own." Variations on this theme were subsequently explored by the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges in his story/mock-essay "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius". Physicist R. V. Jones contrived Crabtree's Bludgeon, which states that "[n]o set of mutually inconsistent observations can exist for which some human intellect cannot conceive a coherent explanation, however complicated."[89]

Recently, American physicist Igor Mazin argued that because high-profile physics journals prefer publications offering exotic and unusual interpretations, the Occam's razor principle is being replaced by an "Inverse Occam's razor", implying that the simplest possible explanation is usually rejected.[90]

Other

[edit]

Since 2012, The Skeptic magazine annually awards the Ockham Awards, or simply the Ockhams, named after Occam's razor, at QED.[91] The Ockhams were introduced by editor-in-chief Deborah Hyde to "recognise the effort and time that have gone into the community's favourite skeptical blogs, skeptical podcasts, skeptical campaigns and outstanding contributors to the skeptical cause."[92] The trophies, designed by Neil Davies and Karl Derrick, carry the upper text "Ockham's" and the lower text "The Skeptic. Shaving away unnecessary assumptions since 1285." Between the texts, there is an image of a double-edged safety razorblade, and both lower corners feature an image of William of Ockham's face.[92]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Ockham's razor does not say that the more simple a hypothesis, the better."[85]
  2. ^ "Today, we think of the principle of parsimony as a heuristic device. We don't assume that the simpler theory is correct and the more complex one false. We know from experience that more often than not the theory that requires more complicated machinations is wrong. Until proved otherwise, the more complex theory competing with a simpler explanation should be put on the back burner, but not thrown onto the trash heap of history until proven false."[85]
  3. ^ "While these two facets of simplicity are frequently conflated, it is important to treat them as distinct. One reason for doing so is that considerations of parsimony and of elegance typically pull in different directions. Postulating extra entities may allow a theory to be formulated more simply, while reducing the ontology of a theory may only be possible at the price of making it syntactically more complex."[53]

References

[edit]
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    Regula I. Causas rerum naturalium non-plures admitti debere, quam quæ & veræ sint & earum phænomenis explicandis sufficient.
    Regula II. Ideoque effectuum naturalium ejusdem generis eædem assignandæ sunt causæ, quatenus fieri potest.
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Further reading

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  • Ockham's Razor, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Sir Anthony Kenny, Marilyn Adams & Richard Cross (In Our Time, 31 May 2007)