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  • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Yesterday I found a source confirming the already known problem as early as in May 1888.
    Pierre, answer me this: what do you expect members of this forum to take from that comment? Do you think it's tantalising? Do you think it will pique our curiosity? Do you think it leaves us wanting to know more?

    It leaves me thinking you are a mentally ill posturing douche who should really go away and get a life.

    A year and a quarter ago you claimed to need only a couple of things more to be able to provide conclusive confirmation that your suspect was the killer. You have claimed many times since, many times, to have been busy uncovering or discovering source after source after source. So let me ask you this also?

    It's a yes or a no: Have you conclusively confirmed that your suspect is the ripper or not? If not, why not? If not, what makes you think you ever will? There are not an infinite number of sources for you to uncover, after all.

    And if not, what exactly was wrong with David pointing that out?

    Comment


    • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
      One does have to feel sorry for Pierre, though.
      I haven't had cause to say this very often, David, but you are completely wrong there. It'll be a cold day in hell before I feel sorry for that pompous ass.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
        I haven't had cause to say this very often, David, but you are completely wrong there. It'll be a cold day in hell before I feel sorry for that pompous ass.
        Fair enough.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
          Hi Henry,

          Yes, the little crapweasel will tell you.

          To "prove it" you must be able to establish "it" as an historical fact. And to be able to do this, you must:

          1. Have many independent reliable and valid sources.

          2. Be able to construct valid and reliable causal explanations, motive explanations and functional explanations from these sources.

          3. Establish a coherent explanatory history on these sources.
          This isn't true by the way. You don't necessarily need "many" independent, reliable and valid sources. Just one could be enough if it is independent, reliable and valid.

          The problem with Pierre is that he uses the word "source" to mean something that he can twist to fit in with his theory (such as the inquest testimony of Mizen or Lawende) rather than to mean actual evidence which objectively confirms the identity of Jack the Ripper. That is no doubt why he feels he needs "many" sources.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
            I haven't had cause to say this very often, David, but you are completely wrong there. It'll be a cold day in hell before I feel sorry for that pompous ass.
            The cold day in hell has already arrived, Henry:

            Poor Pierre sounds lonely.
            By Henry Flower

            10-27-2016, 05:16 AM

            Thread: A major breakthrough

            Post: 614

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
              The cold day in hell has already arrived, Henry:


              By Henry Flower

              10-27-2016, 05:16 AM

              Thread: A major breakthrough

              Post: 614
              Wow. I'm speechless. You truly are the most humourles eejit I've ever seen on these boards.

              Comment


              • Pierre. Could you please answer the two questions I put to you a few posts ago?

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
                  Pierre. Could you please answer the two questions I put to you a few posts ago?
                  Sure. Ask them again in a normal and civilized way, i.e. without silly comments and belittling strategies, and I may try to answer them.
                  Last edited by Pierre; 12-27-2016, 11:36 AM.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
                    Sure. Ask them again in a normal and civilized way,i.e. without silly comments and belittling strategies, and I may try to answer them.
                    Why, are you special? You never belittle anyone, Mr "You're all doing research wrong because you are ignorant of the processes of real history, unlike me, a real historian, (who will ignore every request to share one iota of evidence that I am a historian)"? You've never used belittling strategies on any Lechmere thread?

                    You are one of the worst offenders when it comes to "belittling strategies" so get off your high horse you jerk. You've made a pathetic joke of yourself in this thread.

                    Comment


                    • Pierre: reasoning vs clue-hunting

                      Hi Pierre, I was reading your Christmas presents again, this year's and last year's, and it got me thinking about the difference between reasoning and merely looking for clues. It seems to me that looking for clues is what you mostly do. I have a question that would aid my understanding. It concerns last year’s present, the gogmagog letter. I know you eventually semi-disowned it and dismissed it as low-validity, but that’s not the point of my question, my question concerns reasoning and logical thought as opposed to clue-hunting, and I’d be grateful if you could answer it.

                      To recap, for the unfamiliar: you presented a letter in which, you claimed, it was quite possible that the killer had given the world advance notice of the names of his next victims, their addresses, and the date on which they would be murdered. This information was coded (though you erroneously described it as metaphorical) and consisted of the following:

                      The length of the Lord Mayor’s Show procession was given: nearly a quarter of a mile. You claimed this was a kind of pun on Miller’s Court, Mille Quart. Further, you deduced that a quarter of a mile in feet (1320) was a reference to the room numbers of Mary Kelly and Elizabeth Prater, 13 and 20. Additionally you claimed to have found a clue to their names in a reference to the gilded carriage, which was similar to wording found in a then-unpublished letter by Tennyson, one of whose plays featured characters named Mary and Elizabeth.

                      So my question to you is this: at the time when you presented this letter and your theory to the boards, which of the following did you suppose was the killer’s first intent? – was it

                      to kill on the day of the parade?
                      to kill in rooms 13 and 20 Miller’s Court?
                      or
                      to kill Mary Kelly and Elizabeth Prater?

                      If you claim that his primary intent was to kill on the day of the Show then you must have reasoned that for the purposes of giving advance notice to the attentive he calculated the length of the procession, searched for a street name that could stand as a written pun for that length, converted the length into feet, split it in two to get two room numbers, discovered the names of the residents of those rooms, and made oblique reference to those names by paraphrasing a phrase from an unpublished letter by a writer who also wrote a play featuring those two very common names.

                      If you propose that he selected the addresses first, then you must have reasoned that having selected two locations for murder, he found that by some miraculous coincidence the name of the courtyard could be very tenuously twisted to pun on the length of the procession taking place the day of the killings, and he then converted that length to feet and by an even more exponentially miraculous coincidence, the length in feet gave him the numbers of the rooms he had selected for his murders.

                      If you propose that his first intent was to kill the two specific victims then you must have reasoned that he decided to make oblique reference to those names by paraphrasing a phrase from an unpublished letter by a writer who also wrote a play featuring those two very common names, and that the paraphrase just happened to refer to a carriage that would be taking part in the parade the day of the killing, and that the killer then studied the length of the parade and found by an incredible coincidence the distance in miles was nearly a pun on the name of the courtyard where the intended victims lived, and if you converted it to feet it actually gave you their room numbers!

                      You see, deducing hidden coded clues from a text after the event is the easy part. A child can do it. What is more demanding is doing what a genuine historian or scientist would’ve done, and that is working out whether those clues could feasibly have been arrived at and inserted intentionally before the event. And whichever way you look at it, there is no way the killer went through anything like the procedures outlined above.

                      And if you say that it was none of the above, because in fact EACH of those elements was essential to the events of the day in his mind, then the impossibility of the coincidences in the letter is magnified exponentially.

                      So I’m asking you Pierre, regardless of what you now think of the letter, at the time you presented that theory to the boards, did you apply any reasoning to the idea, or did you just hunt for hidden clues that could be made to retroactively fit events of Nov 9th? Did you ever sit back after finding these clues and ask yourself if there was any feasible way they would or could have been arrived at as coded clues ahead of time?

                      It very much looks as though you did not. If you did, and yet failed to spot how absurd and how impossible a scenario you were formulating, you are clearly neither an historian nor a scientist of any great skill. It was amateurish ripperological sleuthing at its most embarrassing.

                      Did that debacle not give you pause at all, cause you to reconsider your methods or your approach? It revealed you to be quite the opposite of the rigorous and cautious professional historian you want us to think you are. It really was the death-knell for your entire theory. Not that the letter was essential, but that what we saw of your vaunted powers of analysis and reasoning was as comical as it was dismal.

                      Comment


                      • QUOTE=Henry Flower;404516

                        So my question to you is this: at the time when you presented this letter and your theory to the boards, which of the following did you suppose was the killer’s first intent? – was it

                        to kill on the day of the parade?
                        to kill in rooms 13 and 20 Miller’s Court?
                        or
                        to kill Mary Kelly and Elizabeth Prater?

                        If you claim that his primary intent was to kill on the day of the Show then you must have reasoned that
                        Hi Henry,

                        You write "you must have reasoned" - and this is important. What I will decribe here is how I reasoned. So I reasoned that:

                        The intent was to acchive a murder discovery on Lord Mayorīs Day.

                        So I did reason that the killer wrote a message in a letter to the papers.

                        for the purposes of giving advance notice to the attentive he calculated the length of the procession,
                        The author was "told by the police" that there was going to be a procession, nearly a quarter of a mile long. So he mustnīt have calculated it.

                        searched for a street name that could stand as a written pun for that length,
                        The author of the Whitechapel murders didnīt need to search for street names since he obviously knew Whitechapel. I reasoned that the choice of Millerīs Court was made before the letter was planned.

                        converted the length into feet, split it in two to get two room numbers,
                        Since you have the lenght of 1320 and the rooms were close.

                        discovered the names of the residents of those rooms,
                        I reasoned that the author knew the names of some of the victims.

                        and made oblique reference to those names by paraphrasing a phrase from an unpublished letter by a writer who also wrote a play featuring those two very common names.
                        I reasoned that people knew the story about Queen Mary of Scots and Elizabeth. Mary was beheaded by the way.

                        If you propose that he selected the addresses first, then you must have reasoned that having selected two locations for murder, he found that by some miraculous coincidence the name of the courtyard could be very tenuously twisted to pun on the length of the procession taking place the day of the killings, and he then converted that length to feet and by an even more exponentially miraculous coincidence, the length in feet gave him the numbers of the rooms he had selected for his murders.
                        It was what people here love to call a "coincidence". I reasoned that the author knew how to use it.

                        If you propose that his first intent was to kill the two specific victims then you must have reasoned that he decided to make oblique reference to those names by paraphrasing a phrase from an unpublished letter by a writer who also wrote a play featuring those two very common names, and that the paraphrase just happened to refer to a carriage that would be taking part in the parade the day of the killing, and that the killer then studied the length of the parade and found by an incredible coincidence the distance in miles was nearly a pun on the name of the courtyard where the intended victims lived, and if you converted it to feet it actually gave you their room numbers!
                        I reasoned that he could not resist it. He did not need any specific advanced knowledge. He knew the lenght of the procession, he knew some street names.

                        You see, deducing hidden coded clues from a text after the event is the easy part. A child can do it.
                        Yes. What fools the police were he could reason. And so could I. You find it concearning modern serial killers communications too.

                        What is more demanding is doing what a genuine historian or scientist would’ve done, and that is working out whether those clues could feasibly have been arrived at and inserted intentionally before the event. And whichever way you look at it, there is no way the killer went through anything like the procedures outlined above.
                        No, he didnīt. Since the procedures outlined above are your own procedures.

                        The author of the Whitechapel murders was well educated, he knew society and history and could express himself. He lived in the 19th Century. All the advantages were his.

                        So I reasoned that he enjoyed himself sending a letter with the metaphorical "Gogmagog" - the protector of the city. The police was a protector of the city.

                        And whichever way you look at it, there is no way the killer went through anything like the procedures outlined above.
                        Of course he did not go through the procedures outlined above. They are your own procedures, constructed to ridicule and belittle me. But that was not the intention of the Whitechapel killer. It is your intention.

                        And if you say that it was none of the above, because in fact EACH of those elements was essential to the events of the day in his mind, then the impossibility of the coincidences in the letter is magnified exponentially.
                        Each of those elements were only essential to your mind, when you planned to ridicule and belittle me.

                        So I’m asking you Pierre, regardless of what you now think of the letter, at the time you presented that theory to the boards, did you apply any reasoning to the idea, or did you just hunt for hidden clues that could be made to retroactively fit events of Nov 9th?
                        I applied internal and external sources criticism. There are independent sources in the case and the letter was a test against them.

                        Did you ever sit back after finding these clues and ask yourself if there was any feasible way they would or could have been arrived at as coded clues ahead of time?
                        Yes. I asked myself if the serial killer could gain anything by writing such a letter.

                        It very much looks as though you did not.
                        To you, Henry. Naturally.

                        If you did, and yet failed to spot how absurd and how impossible a scenario you were formulating,
                        The absurd and impossible scenario that you formulated above. It is yours entirely. Not mine. And not the Whitechapel killerīs.

                        (And the rest of your post is just accusations and no questions).

                        Regards, Pierre
                        Last edited by Pierre; 12-28-2016, 08:09 AM.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Pierre View Post
                          I reasoned that people knew the story about Queen Mary of Scots and Elizabeth. Mary was beheaded by the way.
                          One can only admire the convoluted thought process which arrived at this result.

                          Remember that a mention by Gogmagog of the Lord Mayor's coach was somehow a clue referencing Tennyson, due to Tennnyson mentioning the coach in a private and (as at 1888) unpublished letter, and one of Tennyson's plays was called 'Queen Mary' in which Princess Elizabeth also featured.

                          That's all bad and mad enough but the twist in the tale is that the Queen Mary who was the subject of Tennyson's play was not Mary, Queen of Scots but Queen Mary, the sister of Elizabeth (who was not executed).

                          So in PierreWorld, when Jack the Ripper posing as Gogmagog mentioned the Lord Mayor's coach, thus leading the readers of his letter in some remarkable way to his play 'Queen Mary', those readers still had to work out that it was a completely different Mary to whom he was referring and upon whose portrait he based the death pose of Mary Jane Kelly.

                          And at one time Pierre actually believed in this nonsense.

                          Comment


                          • QUOTE=David Orsam;404606

                            In Davidworld, the only existing thought is the thought of destrying Pierre. Therefore everything coming out from Davidworld is lies.

                            Remember that David has been believeing in his own little world for a long time now.

                            Comment


                            • Dear Pierre, I find it slightly sad and also predictable that when you feel yourself slightly cornered you resort to complaining about people setting out to belittle or destroy you. You asked me to be polite and so I was. Rest assured, if I am setting out to mock you, you will be aware of the mockery. In this instance I was not. I was asking you whether you had merely looked for clues that would, after the event, support your theory, or whether you had also been remotely strict with yourself about whether these clues could feasibly and reasonably have been placed in advance. The fact that you became so personally defensive was quite revealing, it's not behaviour I would've expected from a scientist or a historian, and I expect there's a simple explanation for that.

                              So to be clear: you were content to believe that based on some inferences you drew from a letter, the killer knew in advance:

                              The names of his victims
                              Their home addresses
                              The date of their murders

                              And you find it entirely within the realms of likelihood that he used the length of the Lord Mayor's procession as a pun on the name of their courtyard, and that same length in feet just happened to yield their room numbers, and a reference to the carriage that would travel in the procession was hiding an oblique reference to their names?

                              Let me ask you, did you ever think of asking a genuine scientist to calculate the odds on these staggering coincidences, or were you content to believe that such coincidences were more likely because of the killer's fine education? Because that's nonsense, isn't it Pierre?

                              Comment


                              • [QUOTE=Henry Flower;404614]

                                it's not behaviour I would've expected from a scientist or a historian, and I expect there's a simple explanation for that.
                                More belittling from you Henry. You canīt help yourself.

                                So to be clear: you were content to believe that based on some inferences you drew from a letter, the killer knew in advance:
                                Here you speak in the past tense.

                                And you find it entirely within the realms of likelihood that he used the length of the Lord Mayor's procession as a pun on the name of their courtyard, and that same length in feet just happened to yield their room numbers, and a reference to the carriage that would travel in the procession was hiding an oblique reference to their names?
                                Here you suddenly speak in the present tense.

                                Let me ask you, did you ever think of asking a genuine scientist to calculate the odds on these staggering coincidences,
                                You can not perform odds calculations on this type of data. The mathematical concept of odds does not apply.

                                And again you try to belittle me:

                                did you ever think of asking a genuine scientist
                                I work with statistics.

                                or were you content to believe that such coincidences were more likely because of the killer's fine education?
                                It is the same for likelyhood. You can not use it on this type of material.

                                Because that's nonsense, isn't it Pierre?
                                Everything you write here is nonsense, isnīt it Henry?

                                Comment

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