- In philosophy, Occam's
razor (also
spelled Ockham's razor or Ocham's razor; Latin:
novacula Occami) is the problem-solving
principle that
recommends searching...
-
Occam or
Ockham may
refer to:
William of
Ockham (c. 1287–1347),
English friar,
philosopher and
theologian Ockham's Razor,
named after him
Byron King-Noel...
-
William of
Ockham or
Occam OFM (/ˈɒkəm/ OK-əm; Latin:
Gulielmus Occamus; c. 1287 – 9/10
April 1347) was an
English Franciscan friar,
scholastic philosopher...
-
Ockham (/ˈɒkəm/ OK-əm) is a
rural and semi-rural
village in the
borough of
Guildford in Surrey, England. The
village starts immediately east of the A3...
-
Viscount Ockham (12 May 1836 – 1
September 1862) was a
British peer and the
eldest of the
three legitimate grandchildren of poet Lord Byron. Lord
Ockham was...
-
Britain from 1725 to 1733; as such, in 1725 he was
created Baron King of
Ockham in the
County of Surrey, in the
Peerage of
Great Britain (verbally and less...
-
Occamism (or
Ockhamism) is the
philosophical and
theological teaching developed by
William of
Ockham (1285–1347) and his disciples,
which had widespread...
-
Ockham Park is a seventeenth-century
English country house in
Ockham, Surrey. The
house is a
square two-storey
block in red
brick with 7 bays on each side...
- In mathematics, an
Ockham algebra is a
bounded distributive lattice L {\displaystyle L} with a dual endomorphism, that is, an
operation ∼ : L → L {\displaystyle...
- The
Summa Logicae ("Sum of Logic") is a
textbook on
logic by
William of
Ockham. It was
written around 1323. Systematically, it
resembles other works of...