Originally posted by Fernglas
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Francis Thompson, Virchow’s Technique, and Bond’s Misreading
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Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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This isn’t a debate. It’s Richard trying to twist the evidence to make Thompson fit.Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostThis isn’t a debate. It’s Richard trying to twist the evidence to make Thompson fit.
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Originally posted by Patrick Differ View Post
No one knows who the Ripper was. There appears to be objectivity in the discussion and I dont personally see anything wrong with the argument content. Constructive counterpoint is debate. Everyone has favorite suspects but the only concrete evidence besides location are the bodies themselves. I didnt see where any of the murders were described as having a Y incision. The Virchow method would be considered as solid evidence of a medical man. That was not the case is my only point based on description and sketches.
Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
And yet there are surgeons that disagree with you.
Those surgeons who disagree with me are among the old ones, who themselves had widely varying levels of competence in the surgical ward (it is telling that those who regularly operated like Brown and Phillips, were convinced the Ripper had considerable knowledge and skill) and among the modern doctors you have to search long and hard to find one who will say the Ripper was an amateur and those are mostly the contrarians for contrary´s sake.
Anyone with a bit of medical knowlege and even those without, looking at the reports can see that the Ripper was no hack. You simply cannot fake what he did under adverse circumstances. A person without the needed knowledge and skill cannot get the steps for a "coursebook 1888" like kidney extraction right, especially not in the dark and crouching/kneeling on the street.
That we still have this debate going on, shows very much the capacity of humans to deny what is pretty obvious to see when it does not fit their theories.
I personally think the Ripper added to his culpability and magnitude of guilt by using his talents for such evil! A person this fast and precise under pressure could have helped save many lifes in a hospital, instead he became a serial killer.
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Patterson’s theory is grossly unfair to Bond, and consists of unsubstatiated oversimplification.
Bond was a highly experienced police surgeon and lecturer in forensic medicine. The idea that he would never have learned anything new since his student days is pretty hard to swallow, especially since it’s so easy to look up autopsies that he participated in that show him as a meticulous and thorough examiner that certainly did remove and examine internal organs. E.g. his and Larkin’s postmortem on Harriet Lane back in 1875, or his and Hebbert’s post-mortem on the torso.
Or check out Thomas Harris’ Post-Mortem Handbook, which came out in 1887, and which shows the level of expertise and the procedure followed by British forensic examiners at the time.
As per Virchow’s guide, Harris and the doctors involved in the ripper-cases start with exterior examination, describing the position of the body and visible damage, then begin examining the head, brain, neck and move further downwards.
Bond made his assessment of the murderer’s skills not because he was a complete dolt who didn’t realize that groundbreaking forensic examiners excised kidneys - ZOMG it’s unheard of!!! but because the wounds were excessive, random, did not resemble surgical cuts AND there was damage to the surrounding organs.
I am not saying he was right in that, just pointing out that Patterson’s idea of the Virchow-approach stupefying Bond is wrong.
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Originally posted by Fernglas View PostHi Herlock!
Those surgeons who disagree with me are among the old ones, who themselves had widely varying levels of competence in the surgical ward (it is telling that those who regularly operated like Brown and Phillips, were convinced the Ripper had considerable knowledge and skill) and among the modern doctors you have to search long and hard to find one who will say the Ripper was an amateur and those are mostly the contrarians for contrary´s sake.
Anyone with a bit of medical knowlege and even those without, looking at the reports can see that the Ripper was no hack. You simply cannot fake what he did under adverse circumstances. A person without the needed knowledge and skill cannot get the steps for a "coursebook 1888" like kidney extraction right, especially not in the dark and crouching/kneeling on the street.
That we still have this debate going on, shows very much the capacity of humans to deny what is pretty obvious to see when it does not fit their theories.
I personally think the Ripper added to his culpability and magnitude of guilt by using his talents for such evil! A person this fast and precise under pressure could have helped save many lifes in a hospital, instead he became a serial killer.
The parameters within which the Ripper had to work, is evidence that he had some idea of what he was doing.
"Great minds, don't think alike"
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Originally posted by Fernglas View PostHi Herlock!
Those surgeons who disagree with me are among the old ones, who themselves had widely varying levels of competence in the surgical ward (it is telling that those who regularly operated like Brown and Phillips, were convinced the Ripper had considerable knowledge and skill) and among the modern doctors you have to search long and hard to find one who will say the Ripper was an amateur and those are mostly the contrarians for contrary´s sake.
Anyone with a bit of medical knowlege and even those without, looking at the reports can see that the Ripper was no hack. You simply cannot fake what he did under adverse circumstances. A person without the needed knowledge and skill cannot get the steps for a "coursebook 1888" like kidney extraction right, especially not in the dark and crouching/kneeling on the street.
That we still have this debate going on, shows very much the capacity of humans to deny what is pretty obvious to see when it does not fit their theories.
I personally think the Ripper added to his culpability and magnitude of guilt by using his talents for such evil! A person this fast and precise under pressure could have helped save many lifes in a hospital, instead he became a serial killer.
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Originally posted by Kattrup View PostPatterson’s theory is grossly unfair to Bond, and consists of unsubstatiated oversimplification.
Bond was a highly experienced police surgeon and lecturer in forensic medicine. The idea that he would never have learned anything new since his student days is pretty hard to swallow, especially since it’s so easy to look up autopsies that he participated in that show him as a meticulous and thorough examiner that certainly did remove and examine internal organs. E.g. his and Larkin’s postmortem on Harriet Lane back in 1875, or his and Hebbert’s post-mortem on the torso.
Or check out Thomas Harris’ Post-Mortem Handbook, which came out in 1887, and which shows the level of expertise and the procedure followed by British forensic examiners at the time.
As per Virchow’s guide, Harris and the doctors involved in the ripper-cases start with exterior examination, describing the position of the body and visible damage, then begin examining the head, brain, neck and move further downwards.
Bond made his assessment of the murderer’s skills not because he was a complete dolt who didn’t realize that groundbreaking forensic examiners excised kidneys - ZOMG it’s unheard of!!! but because the wounds were excessive, random, did not resemble surgical cuts AND there was damage to the surrounding organs.
I am not saying he was right in that, just pointing out that Patterson’s idea of the Virchow-approach stupefying Bond is wrong.Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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Originally posted by Fernglas View PostHi Herlock!
Those surgeons who disagree with me are among the old ones, who themselves had widely varying levels of competence in the surgical ward (it is telling that those who regularly operated like Brown and Phillips, were convinced the Ripper had considerable knowledge and skill) and among the modern doctors you have to search long and hard to find one who will say the Ripper was an amateur and those are mostly the contrarians for contrary´s sake.
Anyone with a bit of medical knowlege and even those without, looking at the reports can see that the Ripper was no hack. You simply cannot fake what he did under adverse circumstances. A person without the needed knowledge and skill cannot get the steps for a "coursebook 1888" like kidney extraction right, especially not in the dark and crouching/kneeling on the street.
That we still have this debate going on, shows very much the capacity of humans to deny what is pretty obvious to see when it does not fit their theories.
I personally think the Ripper added to his culpability and magnitude of guilt by using his talents for such evil! A person this fast and precise under pressure could have helped save many lifes in a hospital, instead he became a serial killer.Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
Nick Warren was a practicing very modern day surgeon who didn’t think that the ripper needed any great level of skill. There’s too much mystique placed on chopping out lumps of meat. As long as you know where that organ is and you have a knife.
Herlock,
You’ve written a careful essay,
“Summing Up And Verdict. 05-24-2025, 09:18 PM“
on how little we can know: no certainty on age, no certainty on nationality, no certainty on local knowledge, no certainty on description, no certainty on employment. And you openly admit you have “no medical knowledge.”
Yet somehow, at the end of all that uncertainty and lack of medical grounding, you confidently assure everyone that you yourself could have done what the Ripper did: remove a kidney in the dark, crouching on a street.
Do you not hear the contradiction in your own words? When experienced 19th-century surgeons like Brown and Phillips insisted the Ripper had “considerable knowledge and skill,” you brush it aside. When modern forensic surgeons like Rupp analyze the mutilations and say they required trained anatomical precision, you dismiss them too. And then—without medical training—you elevate your own armchair guess to certainty.
That isn’t “following the evidence.” That’s replacing trained eyes with your own imagination.
If the Ripper “didn’t need any great level of skill,” then explain why the only men in 1888 who did possess the right skill—former medical students trained in anatomy and dissection, carrying scalpels, with experience on hundreds of cadavers—fit the murders so uncannily. You can’t both minimize the skill and ignore the suspects who demonstrably had it.
So which is it, Herlock? Do we trust surgeons who knew the work, or the claim of someone who admits no medical knowledge but says “as long as you know where the organ is and have a knife” you can do it?
Your verdict ends up damning itself: you tell us we know almost nothing, except that somehow you know enough to play surgeon in the dark.
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
You're granting here that there are some modern doctors don't think that The Ripper had surgical knowledge, but by labelling them as contrarians, you're saying that their views don't count.
Yes, I do so, because for how "easy" it was for the Ripper in Mitre Square, if he would have been an amateur, just a guy with a knife and murder on his mind. Just imagine yourself for a moment in the Ripper´s place. You are at Mitre Square, it is dark, you cannot see much at all, Kati lies dying at your feet. You want her kidney badly, so you cut it out. BUT NOT simply cutting, slashing, hacking it out, no, you follow the steps of a 1888 coursebook kidney extraction, step by step. You even circumvent the navel, something not needed when working on a corpse, but drilled into surgeons of the living.
It is still dark, you have to kneel and you have to be fast, because Mitre Square has several access points from which someone could come in and more, a police beat runs through the place, so time is of essence to not get caught.
Do you really believe some random dude, who barely knows which way to hold a scalpell and could not tell a kidney from the liver (you know suppossed amateur), could get a near textbook kidney extraction right, not seeing much at all, kneeling on the floor and still fast enough to evade the police beat? I do not and I think in your heart of hearts you do not as well.
It would have been different if Kati looked like a bomb had gone off, the kidney cut out in any orgy of blood, gore and thrown out organs, that could have been the deed of anyone with adrenaline and a knife. But that is not what happened!
Once again, The Ripper made a near 1888 coursebook kidney extraction, in the dark, on his knees and under heavy time pressure.
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
Nick Warren was a practicing very modern day surgeon who didn’t think that the ripper needed any great level of skill. There’s too much mystique placed on chopping out lumps of meat. As long as you know where that organ is and you have a knife.
Your previous reference included Prosector, who thought the opposite to the opinion you attribute to Nick Warren. Is there any reason that you have dropped the Prosector opinion?
If I paraphrase your above boldened statement to "There’s too much mystique placed on slapping some paint on a bit of canvas. As long as you know where that canvas is and you have some paint and a few brushes.". Your denigration of medical skills does not enhance your argument my friend.
Cheers, GeorgeNo experience of the failure of his policy could shake his belief in its essential excellence - The March of Folly by Barbara Tuchman
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Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post
Herlock,
You’ve written a careful essay,
“Summing Up And Verdict. 05-24-2025, 09:18 PM“
on how little we can know: no certainty on age, no certainty on nationality, no certainty on local knowledge, no certainty on description, no certainty on employment. And you openly admit you have “no medical knowledge.”
Yet somehow, at the end of all that uncertainty and lack of medical grounding, you confidently assure everyone that you yourself could have done what the Ripper did: remove a kidney in the dark, crouching on a street.
Do you not hear the contradiction in your own words? When experienced 19th-century surgeons like Brown and Phillips insisted the Ripper had “considerable knowledge and skill,” you brush it aside. When modern forensic surgeons like Rupp analyze the mutilations and say they required trained anatomical precision, you dismiss them too. And then—without medical training—you elevate your own armchair guess to certainty.
That isn’t “following the evidence.” That’s replacing trained eyes with your own imagination.
If the Ripper “didn’t need any great level of skill,” then explain why the only men in 1888 who did possess the right skill—former medical students trained in anatomy and dissection, carrying scalpels, with experience on hundreds of cadavers—fit the murders so uncannily. You can’t both minimize the skill and ignore the suspects who demonstrably had it.
So which is it, Herlock? Do we trust surgeons who knew the work, or the claim of someone who admits no medical knowledge but says “as long as you know where the organ is and have a knife” you can do it?
Your verdict ends up damning itself: you tell us we know almost nothing, except that somehow you know enough to play surgeon in the dark.
Good to see you call this out Richard . The blinkered approach to Medical skill / Knowledge in regards to the way in which organs were removed has been left to fester on these boards for way to long .'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman
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Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
Good to see you call this out Richard . The blinkered approach to Medical skill / Knowledge in regards to the way in which organs were removed has been left to fester on these boards for way to long .
I do realise, of course, that I will now expect to get another lecture on Virchow and the incompetence of Bond etc, but none of us know how neatly and surgically the heart was removed, or whether it was performed roughly, for example. I believe that if it was performed with anything resembling surgical neatness and precision, Bond would have noticed.
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