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MasterPo

Occam's Razor and the paranormal

October 7, 2007 | Comment icon 10 comments
Image Credit: Midjourney
MasterPo: This theorem was first put forth by William Occam (aka William of Occam, sometimes also spelled as Ockham), a 14th century English Franciscan friar. The principle says that if there are several possible reasons for something happening, the reason that makes the fewest assumptions is likely to be the right one. This philosophy is of great significance to the paranormal investigator. As investigators of the paranormal we often encounter very strange and unusual events during the investigation or while reviewing the evidence. Being in the paranormal field we are of course looking for evidence to support claims of paranormal activity. But sometimes in our desire to find a good piece of evidence the paranormal community reach pretty far and wide to “put the pieces together”. Too often very obvious or common explanations are overlooked or even excused in place of much more elaborate justifications for deeming something to be paranormal in nature.

By applying the Occam’s Razor theorem it can more clearly be seen that if you dismiss A as being the explanation while presuming all of B and C and D in order to conclude the evidence is paranormal then most likely A was the true answer. It’s not a hard-and-fast rule. But most often it is so.

For example:

• A photograph full of orbs take outdoors on a hot and humid August night could be legitimately paranormal. But more likely it is just moisture.

• The recorded sound of a floor board creaking in an old house during the winter is probably more likely the wood expanding/contracting due to the temperature than being the foot steps of a ghost.

• An EMF reading of 97mg in the living room of a home is more probably the result of electric devices or poor wiring in the house rather than an entity manifesting itself.
• A person claiming demonic activity in their home but nothing is found on numerous investigations could indicate the entity is hiding but is also likely the person is misinterpreting certain events.

This is not to say the statements from home owners/residence, friends, witnesses etc. are always to be suspect or discounted. Not at all. As responsible paranormal investigators it is prudent to document the statements but not let these claims influence your thinking about the source of activity. If activity can be recreated by known artificial means the Occam’s Razor has to conclude the recreation is probably more accurate than the claim. In that case the statements of paranormal activity are more likely misunderstandings or misinterpretations.

The key significance of Occam’s Razor for the paranormal investigator is to teach us to stop, think, and be realistic as to what is possible verses what is likely. In the paranormal field we know that pretty much anything is possible. But just how likely is it? If you have to connect too many dots, make too many assumptions, call upon too many “if’s” to get to the conclusion of something being paranormal than more likely it is not paranormal.

However, by the same principle, don’t be too quick to dismiss evidence either. Paranormal activity is often very subtle. Rarely (in spite of what is shown in movies and on TV) is the paranormal “in your face”. That is why repeat investigations at the same location is so vital to confirming the presence of the paranormal. On any given investigation a good piece of evidence might be dismissible as something else. But in the long run the bigger picture comes out and a clear history of well-documented events can lead to the conclusion of a haunting.

As another famous saying goes: “Patience is a virtue.”

Long Island Paranormal Investigators
http://www.Liparanormalinvestigators.com
Helping the living, the dead, and those in between!

Comments (10)


Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #1 Posted by Please Explain 19 years ago
That's a nice one to read.
Comment icon #2 Posted by MasterPo 19 years ago
Thank you.
Comment icon #3 Posted by veliska27 19 years ago
Yeah I have heard his theories before, and actually it does help to know during an investigation. You should'nt ever jump on the gun, there is scientific explanations for some events that happen that look like paranormal activity. I am the lucky ones that have experianced real paranormal activity, that really has no explaination for,
Comment icon #4 Posted by MasterPo 19 years ago
I am the lucky ones that have experianced real paranormal activity, that really has no explaination for, As the great fictional detective Sherlock Holmes said "When you can dismiss the probable then what you're left with, no matter how improbable, has to be considered a true."
Comment icon #5 Posted by Zero of Deism 19 years ago
The only part of that that I disagree with would be the "recreations". We can recreate ANYTHING, but that does not, in itself, prove that there is no such thing as paranormal activity.
Comment icon #6 Posted by MasterPo 19 years ago
The only part of that that I disagree with would be the "recreations". We can recreate ANYTHING, but that does not, in itself, prove that there is no such thing as paranormal activity. Occam's Razor applies there too. Sure anything can be recreated. Most misunderstood or misinterpreted events are rather basic in function. But if you need to make a lot of actions to recreate it or if you need to presume A & B & C to recreate it then perhaps it isn't so artificial at all but more likely legit.
Comment icon #7 Posted by Zero of Deism 19 years ago
Occam's Razor applies there too. Sure anything can be recreated. Most misunderstood or misinterpreted events are rather basic in function. But if you need to make a lot of actions to recreate it or if you need to presume A & B & C to recreate it then perhaps it isn't so artificial at all but more likely legit. I don't care if it still applies or not, I don't agree with it.
Comment icon #8 Posted by MasterPo 19 years ago
I don't care if it still applies or not, I don't agree with it. I think perhaps you misunderstood the intent of this article. It is not to say that any unusual activity which can be easily recreated artificially is proof of no paranormal activity. Not at all. Rather, the purpose is simply for people to understand that often the answer is a simple one that isn't paranormally based. I think too often people soooo want to find paranormal activity (especially if they've paid to be at a location) and they make some great leaps of assumptions in order to attribute a paranormal meaning to an otherwis... [More]
Comment icon #9 Posted by macddt 19 years ago
I heard that med students are taught to "think horse before considering zebra" when diagnosing patients ailments, I think that thinking can be used here too
Comment icon #10 Posted by Oen Anderson 19 years ago
Occam's razor states quite simply that the simplest answer is most often the corrct answer. It was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle who created the fictional character Sherlock Holmes that really said, "When all other possibilities have been eliminated, that which remains, however improbable, must be the truth." I read both of these in the book "The Money Matrix of the New World Order" by Phillip Tilley. This shows me that you share a common ground with Mr. Tilley in the similarity of your approach to problem solving.


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