Difference between revisions of "Inverted Occam's Razor"
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− | The '''Inverted Occam's Razor''' is an ironic metapher for an inverted use of [[Occam's Razor]] in Science. This principle is often used in [[Pseudoscience|pseudoscientific]] argumentation, which claims that improbable causes and causal chains make a phenomenon plausible. Typical examples are the study of [[crop circle]] phenomena (Cereology) and of [[UFO]]s | + | The '''Inverted Occam's Razor''' is an ironic metapher for an inverted use of [[Occam's Razor|minimalistic principles]] in Science. This principle is often used in [[Pseudoscience|pseudoscientific]] argumentation, which claims that improbable causes and unreasonable causal chains make a phenomenon plausible. Typical examples are the study of [[crop circle]] phenomena (Cereology) and of [[UFO]]s |
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 13:09, 26 February 2011
The Inverted Occam's Razor is an ironic metapher for an inverted use of minimalistic principles in Science. This principle is often used in pseudoscientific argumentation, which claims that improbable causes and unreasonable causal chains make a phenomenon plausible. Typical examples are the study of crop circle phenomena (Cereology) and of UFOs