The Ancient Dream of Unity: Universum, Ockham’s Razor and Chomsky’s Minimalism
Ockham’s Razor. AI image Introduction Western thought begins with a simple, almost disarmingly bold intuition: beneath the swirling multiplicity of appearances lies a single order. The very word universe encodes this hope. From the Latin uni-versum —“turned toward one”—it evokes a world understood as a coherent whole rather than a chaotic heap. Philosophers from antiquity to the Middle Ages embraced this idea in different ways, yet all shared a conviction that understanding requires reducing variety to unity. This ancient aspiration resurfaces, transformed, in the medieval principle now known as “Ockham’s Razor” and, more recently, in Noam Chomsky’s attempt to explain human language with the most economical system possible. Tracing this lineage reveals that the modern appeal to simplicity is not a scientific novelty but a deeply rooted metaphysical expectation. Unity as the First Principle of Explanation Long before medieval scholastics spoke of “razors,” Greek thinkers develope...