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In the AfD some claimed that Hitchens' razor (HRaz) is a special case of Occam's razor (ORaz). In fact, ORaz does not appear to entail HRaz. For an example, Reformed epistemology is a doctrine that is generally supportive of ORaz but rejects HRaz, showing that either ORaz doesn't entail HRaz or the reformed epistemologists are illogical, but in fact they are a well-known school in philosophy known for their logical ingenuity. It would be OR to put this in the article, but perhaps the argument will ward off future merge arguments. — Charles Stewart (talk) 20:58, 1 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
"Proof lies on he who asserts, not on he who denies."
Wouldn't this be translated into grammatical English as "Proof lies on him who asserts, not on him who denies"?
"Him" is the object of "lies," then you switch case because "who" is the subject of "asserts" or "denies."
Has someone 'corrected' it? Yes! Perhaps even Alan Watson, although his copy editor should have caught it. See the article Presumption of Innocence, History section. Monado (talk) 19:09, 7 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Both criticisms of this axiom appear very weak to me, with the first apparently insisting that the burden of proof is on everyone else to prove a negative- which is logically impossible and leads to obvious absurdities if applied in practice i.e: "We need to believe in Atlantis, aliens, ghosts, cryptids, fortune telling, etc. even without evidence because no one has proven concretely that they don't exist." (one could conjure literally anything this way and then insist it's everyone else's job to disprove it.) and the second is literally just circular reasoning of "I believe it because I want to believe it and I want to believe it because I believe it"- with the implication going even a step further that other people should believe it for this non-reason as well. Surely there are better critiques of 'avowed militant atheist' Hitchen's razor than these two non-arguments?
2603:3018:CD9:100:91:F832:8BC6:36B6 (talk) 21:39, 21 November 2023 (UTC)Phoenix[reply]
- From the article:
- The idea is that all beliefs are based on other beliefs, and some "foundational" or "basic beliefs" just need to be assumed to be true in order to start somewhere
- This idea that all beliefs are ultimately based on "foundational" or "basic beliefs" (that must themselves be taken on faith) has been examined and rejected by epistemologists in the books Groundless Belief and The Retreat to Commitment. A Wikipedia editor more competent than me might want to add these citations to the discussion. Both books argue for a standard of evidence based on broad coherence of tentatively held beliefs. The author of the second book had strong intellectual and personal connections to Karl Popper. 213.123.14.238 (talk) 14:15, 16 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
While both Hitchens’ razor and Hitchens’s razor are technically grammatically correct, the additional “s” is not needed, it is much less common, and it will appear awkward to many – if you doubt this, ask yourself how often do you come across Jesus’s vs. the more usual Jesus’? Therefore the page should be moved to “Hitchens’ razor”. 103.12.191.80 (talk) 14:03, 27 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
- This has been discussed many times before, read the archives if you want to know why the current title was chosen. NLeeuw (talk) 15:40, 27 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]