Peter Cheeseman Quote

The apparent simplicity of a model is due to a failure of imagination and limited data, unless the domain really is simple. If the world were really random, chemistry, cooking, and credit would not be possible, so our models cannot be figments of our imagination.


In: J. Shrager and P. Langley (eds), Computational Models of Scientific Discovery and Theory Formation, On Finding the Most Probable Model (p. 91)


The apparent simplicity of a model is due to a failure of imagination and limited data, unless the domain really is simple. If the world were really...

The apparent simplicity of a model is due to a failure of imagination and limited data, unless the domain really is simple. If the world were really...

The apparent simplicity of a model is due to a failure of imagination and limited data, unless the domain really is simple. If the world were really...

The apparent simplicity of a model is due to a failure of imagination and limited data, unless the domain really is simple. If the world were really...