M
Mr.Ex_Nihilo
Guest
I think that Occam’s Razor dulls itself in hindsight, not being able to effectively predict what scientific discoveries it would have hindered or outright prevented if these scientists in question had actually listened to what Occam’s Razor said they could or could not accomplish by their scientific inquiry.
Anybody aware of examples in scientific history where Occam’s Razor would have actually prevented a scientific discovery if the scientist in question had assumed that one should embrace the less complicated formulation of more than one equally valid explanations for a phenomenon?
Anybody aware of examples in scientific history where Occam’s Razor would have actually prevented a scientific discovery if the scientist in question had assumed that one should embrace the less complicated formulation of more than one equally valid explanations for a phenomenon?