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- Newsgroups: alt.quotations
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- From: isaacman@stars.gsfc.nasa.gov (Subvert the Dominant Paradigm! (301) 513-7769)
- Subject: Re: Simple one
- Message-ID: <22DEC199214370850@stars.gsfc.nasa.gov>
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- Organization: NASA/GSFC-Laboratory for Astronomy and Solar Physics
- References: <schwartz.725040572@cunews>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 18:37:00 GMT
- Lines: 14
-
- In article <schwartz.725040572@cunews>, schwartz@alfred.carleton.ca (Saul Schwartz) writes...
- >Does anyone know the quotation to the effect that explanations should
- >be made as simple as possible but no simpler?
- >
- It is not a "quotation" per se, but rather a deductive principle
- commonly known as "Occam's Razor" (sometimes spelled Ockham) stating
- that a hypothesis should embody the minimum possible number of
- assumptions. (Note that this is NOT the same as being "as simple as
- possible", which is the usual misapplication of the tenet.) The
- individual Occam I vaguely recall to have been an Englishman around
- Isaac Newton's era, but I could be totally off base about that.
-
- Rich Isaacman
- NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
-