Hanlon s razor Quotes

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Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

Robert J. Hanlon
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Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

Robert J. Hanlon
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You have attributed conditions to villainy that simply result from stupidity.

Robert A. Heinlein, The Green Hills of Earth
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Focke's razor: Never attribute to plot holes that which is adequately explained by miracles.

Kevin Focke
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The razor bumps and the stretch marks will let you know adulthood charges a fee.

Byron Sogie-Thomas, Razor Bumps and Stretch Marks
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But it was like a dance across a field strewn with razors, and I bled with every step I took.

Ann Aguirre, Restoration
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The path to Salvation is as narrow and as difficult to walk as a razor's edge.

W. Somerset Maugham
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Anyone who ever makes you the slightest bit uncomfortable, Breanna, you tell one of us. You're with Razor, which means you're family.

Katie McGarry, Walk the Edge
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In order to avoid believing in just one God we are now asked to believe in an infinite number of universes, all of them unobservable just because they are not part of ours. The principle of inference seems to be not Occam's Razor but Occam's Beard: "Multiply entities unnecessarily.

J. Budziszewski, What We Can't Not Know: A Guide
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Faith should mean something. Gods . . . should stand for something, not chop and change with every breeze that blows. Gods should be worshipped for the truths they represent, not what party favours they might dispense.”-Razor Eddie the Punk God of the Straight Razor

Simon R. Green, Tales from the Nightside
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Christian apologists who argue that a story about an empty tomb is convincing evidence of a resurrected body are likely unfamiliar with Occam’s razor, which states that among competing hypotheses, the hypothesis with the fewest assumptions should be selected. They assume that the most likely explanation is miraculous resurrection through some unproven divine connection, but more likely scenarios include a stolen body, a mismarked grave, a planned removal, faulty reports, creative storytelling, edited scriptures, etc. No magic required.

David G. McAfee
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