I feel that this must have been seen before, but it's new to me.
Anderson's book, Pseudo-Criticism or the Higher Criticism and its Counterfeit (1904) is available here:
(those outside the USA may need to use a proxy server such as http://proxify.us/)
There is a reference to the Whitechapel Murders on page 15. Anderson has argued that experts tend to lack judgment, so that "no civilised community tolerates a tribunal of experts". He continues as follows:
I think I can guess which of the cases attributed to the Ripper he is referring to in relation to the blunder of an expert, though I'd be interested to hear whether others agree. But I don't really see what he's getting at when he speaks of the "theories of experts" and "Jack the Ripper" being a myth.
Anderson's book, Pseudo-Criticism or the Higher Criticism and its Counterfeit (1904) is available here:
(those outside the USA may need to use a proxy server such as http://proxify.us/)
There is a reference to the Whitechapel Murders on page 15. Anderson has argued that experts tend to lack judgment, so that "no civilised community tolerates a tribunal of experts". He continues as follows:
I think I can guess which of the cases attributed to the Ripper he is referring to in relation to the blunder of an expert, though I'd be interested to hear whether others agree. But I don't really see what he's getting at when he speaks of the "theories of experts" and "Jack the Ripper" being a myth.
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