T
traillius
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Many secularists, atheists, etc, when they attempt to discredit religious or spiritual ideas, use Occam’s razor:
entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity" (entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem)
Here are the misapplied reasons I have noted in the Occam Argument against anything supernatural or paranormal.
a) it is not intended to be exclusive of more complex explanations, only firstly exhaustive of less complex explanations.
b) Occam allowed for three sources of explanation:
entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity" (entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem)
Here are the misapplied reasons I have noted in the Occam Argument against anything supernatural or paranormal.
- The simplest explanation is always and only the only possible explanation.
- If Occam’s razor is insufficient, than the person holding the theory against the razor must be delusional
- reason and sensory experience are the only possible explanations, and if someone presents any other explanation, they are ignorant, delusional, or lying.
a) it is not intended to be exclusive of more complex explanations, only firstly exhaustive of less complex explanations.
b) Occam allowed for three sources of explanation:
- reason
- sensory experience
- ‘that which is considered infallible’
In Occam’s theist beliefs this included the scriptures, and religious teachings.
Funny, many people use Occam, while excluding the third source.