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law of sufficient reason

the proposition, introduced by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, that if something exists, it is necessarily the case that there is sufficient reason for its existence. The principle implies an inherent rationale for the universe. It is complemented by Leibniz’s law of insufficient reason, which states that if there is not sufficient reason for the existence of something, it will not exist.

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Psychology term of the day

February 24th 2025

simple structure

simple structure

in exploratory factor analysis, a set of criteria for determining the adequacy of a factor rotation solution. These criteria require that each factor show a pattern of high factor loadings on certain variables and near-zero loadings on others and that each variable load on only one factor. This minimizes the complexity of the factor solution, allows each variable to be most strongly identified with a specific factor, and increases interpretability.