This is all wrong. Occam's razor is NOT about probabilities or predicting the future!OnyxIonVortex wrote:I think Occam's razor principle is near to what Redafro said. I see it as a statistical principle: what is more probable, "Tomorrow it will rain" or "Tomorrow it will rain at 15:00"? The first one covers more cases, so it is more likely to happen. In the best of cases (if you know that beyond all doubt, if it rains tomorrow, it necessarily will rain at 15:00), the two assertments are equally probable. So it will be always better to choose the most simple one. But here "simple" just refers to "covering more possible cases", not simple to understand, or expressed with few words, or anything like that.
And of course, as Redafro pointed out, if you oversimplify it you end up with things like "Tomorrow something will happen", that covers virtually all the cases but is completely useless.
It's about using the simplest possible theory to explain things, until a new (possibly more complex) theory is found that has more explanatory power.