Hmm, there's an element you've left out of the situation that makes it different from a straight Linda Problem though. In logical terms, it looks like this.
And we know know two things: 1) the person in question is exhibiting shittiness 2) the person in question has been diagnosed with a mental illness. So:
mental_illness = true
shittiness = true
Whether being_a_naturally_shitty_person is true or false is something we have no information on.
So, from that starting point, we already have an account for the shittiness being exhibited since:
mental_illness -> shittiness
and
mental_ilness = true
So if we want to go ahead and make the additional claim that being_a_naturally_shitty_person = true —you're violating Occam's Razor by introducing an unnecessary second cause when we already had a sufficient first one.
So, from that starting point, we already have an account for the shittiness being exhibited since:
So if we want to go ahead and make the additional claim that being_a_naturally_shitty_person = true —you're violating Occam's Razor by introducing an unnecessary second cause when we already had a sufficient first one.