principle (or law) of parsimony - significado y definición. Qué es principle (or law) of parsimony
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Qué (quién) es principle (or law) of parsimony - definición

PHYSIOLOGICAL PRINCIPLE
All-or-None Law; All or none law; All-or-none principle; Bowditch's law; All or nothing principle

principle (or law) of parsimony      
principle (or law) of parsimony
the scientific principle that things are usually connected in the simplest or most economical way.
parsimonious         
  • Possible explanations can become needlessly complex. It might be coherent, for instance, to add the involvement of [[leprechaun]]s to any explanation, but Occam's razor would prevent such additions unless they were necessary.
  • heliocentric model]] (the sun is at the centre). Both work, but the geocentric model arrives at the same conclusions through a much more complex system of calculations than the heliocentric model. This was pointed out in a preface to [[Copernicus]]' first edition of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]''.
  • Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate}}", i.e., "Plurality is not to be posited without necessity"
  • [[Manuscript]] illustration of William of Ockham
PHILOSOPHICAL PRINCIPLE USED TO JUDGE CREDIBILITY OF STATEMENTS
Ockham's razor; Methodological reductionism; Parsimonious explanation; Ockam's Razor; Occom's razor; Diagnostic parsimony; Ockham's Razor; Occams Razor; Parsimonious; Ockham’s Razor; Okhams razor; Occoms razor; Ackham's Razor; Law of Parsimony; Principle of parsimony; Principle of Parsimony; Ockham's razor.; Principle of Economy; Principle of Simplicity; Occum's razor; Okham's razor; Occums razor; Parsimoniously; Ockam's razor; Occham's Razor; Ockhams razor; Ockhams Razor; Morgan's law; Ocam's razor; Ockham’s razor; Occam's Razor; Thargola's sword; Lex parsimoniae; Ockman's razor; Occam's Rasor; Occam’s Razor; Ocham's razor; Okkam's razor; Occum's Razor; Occam razor; Ockham razor; Law of parsimony; Achems razor; Occaam's razor; Occam's razzor; Occams razzor; Occam's razor.; Complexity (fallacy); Okkum's razor; Occams razor; Arcum's razor; Parsimoniousness; Law of economy; Law of succinctness; Ontological parsimony; Okham's Razor; Law Of Parsimony; Law Of Economy; Occams's Razor; Ontological simplicity; Lex parsimoniæ; Aristotle's razor; Principle of simplicity; Principle of economy; Ochkham's razor; Parsimoney; Anti-razor; Simplest explanation; Economy of hypothesis; Principle of economy of hypothesis; Malcolm's razor
[?p?:s?'m??n??s]
¦ adjective very unwilling to spend money or use resources.
Derivatives
parsimoniously adverb
parsimoniousness noun
parsimonious         
  • Possible explanations can become needlessly complex. It might be coherent, for instance, to add the involvement of [[leprechaun]]s to any explanation, but Occam's razor would prevent such additions unless they were necessary.
  • heliocentric model]] (the sun is at the centre). Both work, but the geocentric model arrives at the same conclusions through a much more complex system of calculations than the heliocentric model. This was pointed out in a preface to [[Copernicus]]' first edition of ''[[De revolutionibus orbium coelestium]]''.
  • Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate}}", i.e., "Plurality is not to be posited without necessity"
  • [[Manuscript]] illustration of William of Ockham
PHILOSOPHICAL PRINCIPLE USED TO JUDGE CREDIBILITY OF STATEMENTS
Ockham's razor; Methodological reductionism; Parsimonious explanation; Ockam's Razor; Occom's razor; Diagnostic parsimony; Ockham's Razor; Occams Razor; Parsimonious; Ockham’s Razor; Okhams razor; Occoms razor; Ackham's Razor; Law of Parsimony; Principle of parsimony; Principle of Parsimony; Ockham's razor.; Principle of Economy; Principle of Simplicity; Occum's razor; Okham's razor; Occums razor; Parsimoniously; Ockam's razor; Occham's Razor; Ockhams razor; Ockhams Razor; Morgan's law; Ocam's razor; Ockham’s razor; Occam's Razor; Thargola's sword; Lex parsimoniae; Ockman's razor; Occam's Rasor; Occam’s Razor; Ocham's razor; Okkam's razor; Occum's Razor; Occam razor; Ockham razor; Law of parsimony; Achems razor; Occaam's razor; Occam's razzor; Occams razzor; Occam's razor.; Complexity (fallacy); Okkum's razor; Occams razor; Arcum's razor; Parsimoniousness; Law of economy; Law of succinctness; Ontological parsimony; Okham's Razor; Law Of Parsimony; Law Of Economy; Occams's Razor; Ontological simplicity; Lex parsimoniæ; Aristotle's razor; Principle of simplicity; Principle of economy; Ochkham's razor; Parsimoney; Anti-razor; Simplest explanation; Economy of hypothesis; Principle of economy of hypothesis; Malcolm's razor
Someone who is parsimonious is very unwilling to spend money. (FORMAL)
ADJ: usu ADJ n [disapproval]

Wikipedia

All-or-none law

In physiology, the all-or-none law (sometimes the all-or-none principle or all-or-nothing law) is the principle that if a single nerve fibre is stimulated, it will always give a maximal response and produce an electrical impulse of a single amplitude. If the intensity or duration of the stimulus is increased, the height of the impulse will remain the same. The nerve fibre either gives a maximal response or none at all.

It was first established by the American physiologist Henry Pickering Bowditch in 1871 for the contraction of heart muscle.

An induction shock produces a contraction or fails to do so according to its strength; if it does so at all, it produces the greatest contraction that can be produced by any strength of stimulus in the condition of the muscle at the time.

This principle was later found to be present in skeletal muscle by Keith Lucas in 1909. The individual fibres of nerves also respond to stimulation according to the all-or-none principle.