Debunking the Arguments of Paranormal Skeptics and Debunkers
Argument # 3: The Occam’s Razor rule
Stated as: “When there are two competing explanations
for an event, the simpler one is more likely.”
This
argument is a principle that skeptics often misuse to try to force alternate
explanations to
paranormal ones, even if those explanations involve false
accusations or do not fit the facts.
Originally, it began as a principle in physics having to do with
parsimony, but somehow got twisted into a mantra for invalidating paranormal
claims. It was popularized by scientist
Carl Sagan in his novel turned movie “Contact”, where
Jodie Foster quotes it while during a conversation with a theist to defend her
belief that God doesn’t exist.
(Ironically, at the end of the movie it is used against her in a public
interrogation by a National Security Agent.)
However, an analysis on the facts and assumptions of this argument
reveals some obvious problems.
1) First of all, Occam’s Razor, termed by 14th Century logician and friar William of
Occam, refers to a concept that states that
"Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily." It was not intended to be used to evaluate
claims of the paranormal as skeptics today use it for. As Phil Gibbs points out in “Physics
FAQ”: (http://www.weburbia.com/physics/)
“To
begin with we used Occam's razor to separate theories
which would
predict
the same result for all experiments. Now we are trying to choose
between
theories which make different predictions. This is not what Occam
intended……..
The
principle of simplicity works as a heuristic rule-of-thumb but some
people
quote it as if it is an axiom of physics. It is not. It can work
well in
philosophy or particle physics, but less often so in cosmology
or psychology,
where things usually turn out to be more complicated than
you
ever expected. Perhaps a quote from Shakespeare would be more
appropriate than Occam's razor: "There are more
things in heaven and
earth,
Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
The
law of parsimony is no substitute for insight, logic and the
scientific method. It should never be relied upon to make or defend a
conclusion. As arbiters of correctness only logical consistency and
empirical
evidence are absolute.”
Even Isaac Newton didn’t use Occam’s Razor like the
skeptics of today do. His version of it
was
“We
are to admit no more causes of natural things than such as are both true and
sufficient to explain their appearances.” (see same
Physics FAQ)
Obviously, he was referring to explanations to
explain natural phenomena, not
paranormal or supernatural phenomena!
2) Second, what is “simpler” is often relative. As Phil Gibbs points out in the same Physics
FAQ:
“Simplicity
is subjective and the universe does not always have the same ideas about
simplicity as we do.”
3) Third, even if we take Occam’s Razor at face value the way skeptics use it, just because
one explanation is more likely doesn’t mean that it’s always the correct
one. For example, if I toss a die, it is
more likely that I will roll numbers 1-5 than a 6. But that doesn’t mean that a 6 will never
come up. Therefore, occasionally an
unlikely explanation can be expected to be true sometimes. However, skeptics treat Occam’s Razor as if it were
an absolute rule and use it as a label for denying any paranormal claim, no
matter how valid.
4) Fourth, skeptics have used Occam’s Razor so religiously that they misuse it by inventing false
accusations and denying the facts in order to force a simpler more natural
explanation. For example, if someone had
an amazing psychic reading at a psychic fair (not prearranged) where they were
told something very specific that couldn’t have been guessed by cold reading,
skeptics would start inventing false accusations such as: “Someone who knew you must have tipped off
the psychic in advance”, “A spy in the room must have overheard you mention the
specific detail before the reading”, “You must have something in your
appearance that reveals the detail”, “You must have remembered it wrong since
memory is fallible”, etc. Even if none of these accusations are true, skeptics
will still insist on it simply because it’s the simpler explanation to them. Likewise, if someone during an NDE or OBE
hears a conversation or witnesses something many miles away and later upon
verification, it turns out to be true, the skeptics will say that the simpler
explanation is that the patient knew about the detail or conversation
beforehand but forgot it. A skeptic did
that to me once when I brought up how a psychic was able to tell me that I had
a tragic period in my life when I was 9 years old, without any other
information or clue from me other than my birth date. He kept insisting that I gave her clues which
allowed her to predict that, even though I guaranteed him that I didn’t. Examples like these suggest that skeptics are
willing to support a false explanation rather than a paranormal one due to
their bias.
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