beliefs that are more specific and detailed, having higher information content, are inherently less likely to be true — or conversely put, a belief that is so broad and general that it could not possibly be false accomplishes that by claiming nothing of substance at all, leaving no claims open to falsify — so such unlikely, high-information beliefs that, nevertheless, still have not been falsified, have withstood much more testing than those that put forward nothing to test — Pfhorrest
But as new evidence accumulates that cannot be reconciled with the existing paradigmatic theory, the best way to describe all the evidence at hand begins to grow again into an unwieldy patchwork of the main paradigmatic theory and all of the exceptions and special cases needed to be made and used to handle the anomalous evidence, until at some point that patchwork becomes so complex that other competing theories, previously rejected as less parsimonious than the paradigmatic one, are now more parsimonious than the old paradigm plus all of its exceptions, and it becomes rational to adopt the best of them instead of trying to cling to the old paradigm and its mess of special exceptions. — Pfhorrest
I don't get it. — Pfhorrest
:100:The best theory best compresses the data. — norm
:clap:The rivalry between geocentrism and heliocentrism is a perfect example of this. — Enrique
Viewed on end one sees a large metal ring but when viewed laterally one sees a length of coils of a large metal spring. The latter is a more complete description than the more parsimonious former description. Neither, however, are "wrong".The simplest explanation: the clock hands haven't moved i.e. the clock is broken
True explanation: 12 hours have passed since you last checked the clock. — TheMadFool
Viewed on end one sees a large metal ring but when viewed laterally one sees a length of coils of a large metal spring. The latter is a more complete description than the more parsimonious former description. Neither, however, are "wrong". — 180 Proof
and it becomes rational to adopt the best of them instead of trying to cling to the old paradigm and its mess of special exceptions. — Pfhorrest
I think parsimony isn't the only game in town though. Explanatory power which would include completeness also matters, right? — TheMadFool
In other words, is it just manifestly rational to get a good deal? — norm
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