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  • #16
    "Originally Posted by Beowulf


    ...and I desperately want to know...who the heck was that guy?"


    Originally posted by HelenaWojtczak View Post
    What guy, darling?
    Some say he landed in the drink, some say he was a barber. Some say he was never just one man and some say he was a cobbler.

    Some say he was heir to the throne and some say only a painter,

    but I say who was that guy that time is making fainter.

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Beowulf View Post

      Some say he landed in the drink, some say he was a barber.

      Some say he was never just one man and some say he was a cobbler.

      Some say he was heir to the throne and some say only a painter,

      but I say who was that guy that time is making fainter.
      That made me laugh, but shouldn't the first two lines rhyme and the second scan?

      And who was the cobbler?

      Let's work on this and make it better!
      Helena Wojtczak BSc (Hons) FRHistS.

      Author of 'Jack the Ripper at Last? George Chapman, the Southwark Poisoner'. Click this link : - http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/chapman.html

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by HelenaWojtczak View Post
        That made me laugh, but shouldn't the first two lines rhyme and the second scan?

        And who was the cobbler?

        Let's work on this and make it better!
        I noticed my own poetic license needs to be renewed or maybe taken away, lol.

        Tonight I would love to better it but as for now they just called me in to work, darn. Was having fun with that.

        Should've caught him when you could, Mr. Lusk

        (oh, the cobbler was David Cohen).
        Last edited by Beowulf; 07-11-2012, 06:07 PM. Reason: additional information

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        • #19
          Originally posted by HelenaWojtczak View Post

          Fact is proven, Truth is felt.


          I've never heard that expression before. Is it your own creation?

          Helena
          I guess. Truth is subjective. Which doesn't make it opinion, which is also subjective.

          For example, I am Jewish. That is a true statement. Other Jews could easily make the argument that I am not Jewish. And those would be true statements.

          I say that I am because it is the way I was raised, it's the culture I identify with, it's the people I know, I'm certainly never going to end up a Christian, and if I had a kid, I would raise them Jewish. It is a fundamental part of who I am.

          Most Orthodox Jews would say I am not Jewish, because I do not go to synagogue, I do not participate in religious services, and I don't pray or follow Jewish law.

          Both of our truths are valid, because we define "Jewish" in different ways. Equally valid definitions. So truth is felt more than proven.

          And we all know that someone can tell the truth, and be wrong. Anyone who saw my group of friends together would think we despise each other. Insults arguments, making fun, it's just our way. We like each other just fine. And a person can see a murderer running from the scene, and be absolutely sure that the guy had red hair, when the guy really has light brown hair and was running in front of a neon sign that made his hair look red. The witness told the truth. He just couldn't accurately relay the facts. The day that humans realized that perception is not necessarily reality, we had to separate fact from truth.
          The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

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          • #20
            I would say that if a man says "X had red hair," then that statement carries an implicit assertion - that if someone looks at the man's hair in "normal" light (which is easy enough to define) then his hair will appear red. Of course, things aren't really coloured but that's not really what we're talking about. If someone says that the man's hair is red, when in fact it's only red because of a neon light, then I would say that the man has (unintentionally) not told the truth, because he has got a fact wrong. If he had said "The man's hair looked red to me" then he'd have been telling the truth.

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            • #21
              Some say he landed in the drink, some say he was a barber. Some say he was never just one man and some say he was a cobbler.

              Some say he was heir to the throne and some say only a painter,

              but I say who was that guy that time is making fainter.
              But all of us (right pond at least) know he's The Stig...

              Dave

              Comment


              • #22
                Originally posted by HelenaWojtczak View Post
                ...Nothing wrong with speculation. My gripe is with people who deliberately make things up and present them as facts because it supports their pet suspect.
                Those who have witnessed any number of repetitive arguments on Casebook will notice how easily conjecture turns into fact. There does seem to be a somewhat serious problem with what a writer or poster perceive's to be a fact, and what is truely factual information.
                Insisting one's interpretation is fact does not make it so.


                I have to disagree with you there because I think you can build an argument (i.e. promote your pet suspect) from the facts.
                Absolutely you can. Though any conclusion arrived at will often be a matter of choices. Which may mean your suspect will never be more than a 'maybe', which is not strong enough for some.

                But to make up lies in order to make your weak suspect look like a strong one is, to me, utterly reprehensible and almost a hanging offence.

                If making up 'lies' includes manipulating, or misrepresenting what we know, which I think is more commonplace than actually making up lies, then yes.
                One of the problems I see is this, the proposer has so convinced him/her self that what they are saying is true, they don't see the falsity of their argument. We seem to have a frequency of arguments where the basis is nothing more than assumption built on top of assumption.

                It only takes repetitive assertions of these assumptions before a handful of readers will begin to believe them.

                Regards, Jon S.
                Regards, Jon S.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by Beowulf View Post
                  Some say he landed in the drink, some say he was a barber. Some say he was never just one man and some say he was a cobbler.

                  Some say he was heir to the throne and some say only a painter,

                  but I say who was that guy that time is making fainter.
                  Very clever Beowulf.
                  Regards, Jon S.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    I had completely forgotten my earlier post and tonight voted for option 2 (though I didn't like the "OK" bit). Obviously I am an unreliable source, even concerning myself.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Robert View Post
                      I would say that if a man says "X had red hair," then that statement carries an implicit assertion - that if someone looks at the man's hair in "normal" light (which is easy enough to define) then his hair will appear red. Of course, things aren't really coloured but that's not really what we're talking about. If someone says that the man's hair is red, when in fact it's only red because of a neon light, then I would say that the man has (unintentionally) not told the truth, because he has got a fact wrong. If he had said "The man's hair looked red to me" then he'd have been telling the truth.
                      Fact vs. Fiction, Truth vs. Lie, easy enough. The man told the truth as he saw it, so he did not lie, but he was incorrect and therefore not factual. None of which has any bearing on reality. Philosophy exists for a reason. It's because this crap is not easy to sort out.

                      Fact is not truth is not reality is not rational is not concrete. It can be all those things, but usually isn't. A fact is that which can be proven. Truth in theory has to do with accuracy, but more often has to do with fidelity. Many truths can never be proven. Reality has to do with how things are, rather than how they are imagined to be, but even that is completely subjective. Rationality is all about reasoning, which we all know has little basis in fact truth or reality. And concrete simply means tangible.

                      The speed of light is a fact, is probably the truth, has little to do with reality, and nothing whatsoever to do with rationality or concreteness. My religion has nothing to do with fact, everything to do with truth, a lot to do with reality, nothing to do with rationality, and isn't concrete in the slightest. And the platypus is both real and concrete, but I think thats the most we can give it.

                      And don't even get me STARTED on honesty, which can be preserved while engaging in none of the above traits.

                      To the point of this thread, truth is much dodgier than fact. I could say that Jack the Ripper was some guy named Ed Smythe who was a shoeshine. Clearly I can't prove that. So it cannot be a fact. But 50 years down the line, they may find that holy crap, Jack the Ripper was a shoeshine named Ed Smythe. Which meant that I told a completely fact free truth.

                      The vocabulary will kill us all one day.
                      The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        The poll is missing the all to common case where someone creates a jolly good read that has absolutely no basis in reality yet still does not err in the basic facts.

                        Also, as a follow-up to the original poll: What about Ripper fiction? Is it imperative that fictionalized accounts have the basic facts correct?

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by HelenaWojtczak View Post
                          That made me laugh, but shouldn't the first two lines rhyme and the second scan?

                          And who was the cobbler?

                          Let's work on this and make it better!
                          well, I'll have another go at it:

                          Some say he plunged into the drink
                          some say he was a cruel barber
                          some say he ended up in the clink
                          some say 'went mad' from strange ardor

                          Mystery abounds. Was he heir to the throne
                          or a famous painter acting alone
                          a cobbler, a butcher, a poisoner, a robber
                          Endless search for the springheeled dauber

                          A man on his own or two of a kind
                          a white rabbit was he
                          and we are his blind.

                          Btw, I look forward to reading your book, the one about the *cruel barber

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Hello Jon
                            Which may mean your suspect will never be more than a 'maybe', which is not strong enough for some.

                            I thought all JtR suspects were only a maybe. If one was a certainty, this entire guessing game could end.


                            If making up 'lies' includes manipulating, or misrepresenting what we know, which I think is more commonplace than actually making up lies, then yes.


                            Sometimes people only tell half the story, the half that supports their suspect. Again using Chapman as my example, people are forever citing the fact that he lived in the East End during the Ripper murders, a short walk to all the murder sites. On the face of it, that looks very suspicious -- until you add the information that 250,000 other men lived there too.



                            There does seem to be a somewhat serious problem with what a writer or poster perceive's to be a fact, and what is truely factual information.
                            Insisting one's interpretation is fact does not make it so...... It only takes repetitive assertions of these assumptions before a handful of readers will begin to believe them


                            In "The Cable Street Dandy" dissertation on this site, we are told that Chapman 'took a knife to his wife...in New Jersey and threatened to cut her head off with it, causing her to flee back to England in terror—as reported by The Daily Chronicle, 23 March 1903" '. AFAIK, nobody has queried the source of this story, and yet no document, newspaper or witness statement contains it; not even the newspaper cited in the dissertation, which states that Chapman "told her that he meant to have cut her head off". It does not mention fleeing home in terror. Despite this, I've seen people cite the incident as a fact, and the fact cited as evidence that he was JtR.

                            arguments where the basis is nothing more than assumption built on top of assumption.


                            This reminds me of the backwards assumptions made by R. Michael Gordon. He conjectures that Chapman (in order to become a poison-killer) must have had a violent childhood. He then cites the purported violent childhood as a fact when he uses it to support his argument that Chapman was the Ripper.


                            What depresses me about this whole subject is that most readers trust authors to be presenting true facts, most especially if their writings have been published on a reputable website, in a respected magazine, and most of all in a book. Readers can't go off and research the entire subject of every book and article they read in order to check up that the author hasn't made anything up, we trust. Where would we even start to research something if we cannot use other books? 99% of people are not able to spend their lives poring over primary sources in far-flung record offices, and that is why we have nonfiction authors - they do all the legwork, and then tell us the results. IMO, for such an author to present invention as fact is doubly wrong, because it's an abuse of the trust that is placed in them by readers.

                            And we really are taught to trust what is in a nonfiction book -- look at when we are at school/university - you want to know anything, you look it up in a book. Books are implicitly trusted, believed and then cited to back up our subsequent essays and dissertations. If we all stop believing nonfiction books, how can anyone be taught anything at school or university?


                            Helena
                            Helena Wojtczak BSc (Hons) FRHistS.

                            Author of 'Jack the Ripper at Last? George Chapman, the Southwark Poisoner'. Click this link : - http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/chapman.html

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Errata
                              Your post is totally brilliant - what a brain!

                              Barnaby
                              I am sorry my poll isn't perfectly worded

                              What about Ripper fiction? Is it imperative that fictionalized accounts have the basic facts correct?

                              IMHO, no. In fiction you can write absolutely anything you like. You have no responsibility to the truth whatever.

                              Beowulf
                              Some say he plunged into the drink... etc

                              You've done a blindingly wonderful job there!

                              Could you weave a sailor in it?

                              Helena
                              Helena Wojtczak BSc (Hons) FRHistS.

                              Author of 'Jack the Ripper at Last? George Chapman, the Southwark Poisoner'. Click this link : - http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/chapman.html

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Jack verse

                                Salve all,
                                While we're all breaking out in rhyme, how about this?

                                There once was a killer called Jack,
                                Who had the the whole world on his track,
                                If he got away,
                                Some people might say,
                                His pursuers were kept off his back.

                                Regards,
                                C4

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