The spherical cow is a humorousmetaphor for highly simplifiedscientific models of complex phenomena.[1][2][3][4] Originating in theoretical physics, the metaphor refers to physicists' tendency to develop toy models that reduce a problem to the simplest form imaginable, making calculations more feasible, even if the simplification hinders the model's application to reality.
The metaphor and variants have subsequently been used in other disciplines.
History
The phrase comes from a joke that spoofs the simplifying assumptions sometimes used in theoretical physics.[5]
Milk production at a dairy farm was low, so the farmer wrote to the local university, asking for help from academia. A multidisciplinary team of professors was assembled, headed by a theoretical physicist, and two weeks of intensive on-site investigation took place. The scholars then returned to the university, notebooks crammed with data, where the task of writing the report was left to the team leader. Shortly thereafter the physicist returned to the farm, saying to the farmer, "I have the solution, but it works only in the case of spherical cows in a vacuum."
John Harte, who received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1965,[6] reported that he first heard the joke as a graduate student.[7] One of the earliest published references is in a 1970 article by Arthur O. Williams Jr. of Brown University, who described it as "a professional joke that circulated among scientists a few years ago".[8]
The story is told in many variants,[9] including a joke about a physicist who said he could predict the winner of any race provided it involved spherical horses moving through a vacuum.[10][11] A 1973 letter to the editor in the journal Science describes the "famous story" about a physicist whose solution to a poultry farm's egg-production problems began with "Postulate a spherical chicken".[12]
Cultural references
The concept is familiar enough that the phrase is sometimes used as shorthand for the entire issue of proper modeling. For example, Consider a Spherical Cow is a 1985 book about problem solving using simplified models.[7] A 2015 paper on the systemic errors introduced by simplifying assumptions about spherical symmetries in galactic dark-matter haloes was titled "Milking the spherical cow – on aspherical dynamics in spherical coordinates".[13]
^"John Harte". ESPM UC Berkeley Rausser College of Natural Resources. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
^ abHarte, John (1985). "Preface". Consider a Spherical Cow: A Course in Environmental Problem Solving. Los Altos: William Kaufmann. p. xiii. ISBN0-86576-086-1.