Occam's razor is a rule of thumb. Its logical basis can be argued thus. There are very many complicated theories, and for one of these to explain a set of empirical facts is only weak evidence that it is correct (the agreement is more likely to be by chance). There are few simple theories so that if one of these is consistent with the facts it is stronger evidence that it is correct.
[This argument is my independent view. Without reading anything about Occam's razor, I can confidently state that someone else deserves credit for thinking of it decades earlier].
I was wondering if anyone here had any opinions about Occam's Razor and a multiverse scenario. I have seen several arguments that Occam's Razor is pro-multiverse. A piece from Victor Stenger (http://www.colorado.edu/philosophy/vstenger/Cosmo/ant_encyc.pdf):
"
Several commentators have argued that a multiverse cosmology violates Occam's razor.
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This is wrong. The entities that Occam's law of parsimony forbids us from "multiplying beyond
necessity" are theoretical hypotheses, not universes. Although the atomic theory of matter
multiplied the number of bodies we must consider in solving a thermodynamic problem by 10
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or so per gram, it did not violate Occam's razor. Instead, it provided for a simpler, more
powerful, more economic exposition of the rules that were obeyed by thermodynamic systems."
Also, I've seen Max Tegmark argue on similar lines before. Any thoughts?