Jeff
Just so long as we agree that you are not in a position to tell us - as you tried to do yesterday - that the difference between the two expert opinions on the marginalia was that Davies qualified his opinion by adding the word "probably".
All you can comment on is the difference between the brief comments about the Davies report in the press release, and the even briefer comment in the "A to Z" that "the handwriting has been confirmed as Swanson's" by Totty.
The point is that it isn't humanly possible for anyone to identify handwriting with certainty. All document examiners can deal in is probability. As I've pointed out before, typically they use a nine-point scale to express the probability of two samples having been written by the same person. If Totty gave anything but the most informal, off-the-cuff opinion, he must have spoken in terms of the probability - not the certainty - of the writing being Swanson's, because no professional could do otherwise.
Just so long as we agree that you are not in a position to tell us - as you tried to do yesterday - that the difference between the two expert opinions on the marginalia was that Davies qualified his opinion by adding the word "probably".
All you can comment on is the difference between the brief comments about the Davies report in the press release, and the even briefer comment in the "A to Z" that "the handwriting has been confirmed as Swanson's" by Totty.
The point is that it isn't humanly possible for anyone to identify handwriting with certainty. All document examiners can deal in is probability. As I've pointed out before, typically they use a nine-point scale to express the probability of two samples having been written by the same person. If Totty gave anything but the most informal, off-the-cuff opinion, he must have spoken in terms of the probability - not the certainty - of the writing being Swanson's, because no professional could do otherwise.
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