OSC Answers Questions
QUESTION:
This might be a stretch, but is Mazer Rackham's name derived at all
from "Ockham's Razor" -- the scientific principle that states that when all
possibilities are explored, the best answer or solution is the simplest (or something
like that)? It seems that Mazer Rackham followed that principle in his victory
over the Buggers in the 2nd invasion.
-- Submitted Anonymously
OSC REPLIES: - May 12, 2000
There is a sort of euphonious similarity between "Mazer Rackham" and
"Ockham's razor," but it is pure coincidence (or unconscious resonance). The
name "Mazer" came from the name of an old building on the Brigham Young
University campus and the first president of BYU, for whom it was named; the
name Rackham came from the children's book illustrator. The names were chosen
simply because they sounded good to me and suggested a combination of national
heritages in a future in which cultures and races have hodged and podged. But it
might well be that the reason the name sounded good to me was because of the
familiar phrase "Ockham's razor."
Or not.
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