Occam's Razor

The first principle I would like to introduce is what is often referred to as Occam's Razor which urges you to always look for the most simple explanation rather than the most complicated if nothing more is gained by the complication of the explanation. It sounds so simple and true but this single principle is perhaps the most violated principle in the coffee community as it seems that many people are making a great effort to overcomplicate things rather than simplifying things, so it is definitely worth mentioning explicitly and call out as a separate principle to apply from our historical heritage of scientific methodology. 

William of Ockham is traditionally referred to with this concept but actually, already Aristotle came up with this principle:

“We may assume the superiority of the demonstration which derives from fewer postulates or hypotheses” 
Aristotle (384–322 BC) in Posterior Analytics

And William of Occam says:

“It is futile to do with more things that which can be done with fewer” 
William of Ockham (1287–1347 AC) in Summa Totius Logicae

Examples where this principle is violated in the coffee roasting community could be these

5) Defaulting to calculating and using ratios and speeds in all situations rather than just using them in the very specific and only situations where they could be useful has another built-in problem: You lose information in both types of calculations! If you provide me with the recipe for a brew or show me a roast curve I could always calculate the ratio, Rate of Rise or Development Time Ratio myself but if you give me the ratio, Rate of Rise or Development Time ratio I can’t go back to the recipe of the brew or the roast course because I have lost information during the calculations of these derivatives. You have the same ratio in a 1 liter brew and a 200ml brew and you can have different RoR on roast going through the exact same process if the probes are different or placed differently. Likewise a roast with total roast time 10 min and first crack after 8 min gives you a DTR of 20% which is also the case for a roast with 20 min total roast time and first crack at 16 minutes. The fact that you lose information when calculating the speed of a process can be illustrated with mathematics by looking at the technicalities of finding the speed of a power function by applying the power rule which is beyond the scope to explain in this oral medium of a podcast but I have found good explanations on wikipedia and Kahn academy so please go to the show notes if you want to see how information is lost in the process of deriving the speed of a power function

Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_rule

Kahn academy:
https://www.khanacademy.org/math/old-ap-calculus-ab/ab-derivative-rules/ab-power-rule/e/power-rule-intro