The principle that for any event, phenomenon, or proposition, there exist infinite reasons across infinite spectra, none of which together are ever sufficient for complete
explanation. This extends the principle of insufficient reason into spectral dimensions: not only are reasons infinite, but they exist on different logical spectra—causal reasons on one spectrum, meaningful reasons on another, structural reasons on a third, historical reasons on a fourth. No explanation can capture them all; every explanation is partial, situated, incomplete. The law of insufficient spectral reason is humbling—it says that
understanding is always
approximation, that certainty is always illusion, and that the best we can do is acknowledge the infinite reasons we'll never fully grasp.
Example: "She asked why her marriage ended, seeking a sufficient reason. Her therapist invoked the law of insufficient spectral reason: 'There are infinite reasons across infinite spectra—
psychological,
historical, economic, spiritual, random. You'll never find the one reason because there isn't one. There are only countless partial reasons, none sufficient, all real.' She left with infinite
explanations and no closure, which was exactly the point."