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William of Ockham
In the early fourteenth century, when Europe’s universities were packed with monks and clerics arguing about God, logic, and the structure of reality, a quiet Franciscan friar from a small English village began to do something dangerous: he started cutting away at the grand systems of his time. It was not a physical blade he wielded, but a habit of mind, a principle that later generations would remember as a “razor”: do not multiply entities beyond necessity. His name was William of Ockham. To later philosophers, he would become a symbol of intellectual sharpness, the man who helped strip scholastic metaphysics down to essentials and who, in doing so, reshaped the background against which Western moral thought developed.
Selenius Media
By Selenius MediaWilliam of Ockham
In the early fourteenth century, when Europe’s universities were packed with monks and clerics arguing about God, logic, and the structure of reality, a quiet Franciscan friar from a small English village began to do something dangerous: he started cutting away at the grand systems of his time. It was not a physical blade he wielded, but a habit of mind, a principle that later generations would remember as a “razor”: do not multiply entities beyond necessity. His name was William of Ockham. To later philosophers, he would become a symbol of intellectual sharpness, the man who helped strip scholastic metaphysics down to essentials and who, in doing so, reshaped the background against which Western moral thought developed.
Selenius Media