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I ran across a reference to Hanlan's Razor today and had not heard of it before.
Wikipedia's description of it is:
"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity".
Its history is somewhat blurry and possibly related to Robert Heinlein.
From there I ran into Hitchen's Razor:
"What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence",
which apparently echos sayings from the 1800's.
Then of course there is Carl Sagan's famous saying (The Sagan Standard) of:
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence", which was preceded by
Marcello Truzzi's (never heard of him before, but apparently a famous skeptic) saying of:
"An extraordinary claim requires extraordinary proof".
All of these may be relevant to some forum discussions from time to time.
Wikipedia's description of it is:
"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity".
Its history is somewhat blurry and possibly related to Robert Heinlein.
From there I ran into Hitchen's Razor:
"What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence",
which apparently echos sayings from the 1800's.
Then of course there is Carl Sagan's famous saying (The Sagan Standard) of:
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence", which was preceded by
Marcello Truzzi's (never heard of him before, but apparently a famous skeptic) saying of:
"An extraordinary claim requires extraordinary proof".
All of these may be relevant to some forum discussions from time to time.