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I love the ironic side of the article. Perhaps they should add the reason for it, from Fermi's and Neumann's. When you are building a model of reality in Physics, If something doesn’t fit the experiments, you can’t just add a parameter (or more) variate it and fit the data. The model should have zero parameters, ideally, or the least possible, or, even at a more deeper level, the parameters should emerge naturally from some simple assumptions. With 4 parameters you don’t know whether you are really capturing a true aspect of reality of just fitting the data of some experiment. |
That said, the wisdom of the quip has been widely lost in many fields. In many fields data is "modeled" with huge regression models with dozens of parameters or even neural networks with billions of parameters.
> In 1953, Enrico Fermi criticized Dyson’s model by quoting Johnny von Neumann: “With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk.”[1]. This quote is intended to tell Dyson that while his model may appear complex and precise, merely increasing the number of parameters to fit the data does not necessarily imply that the model has real physical significance.