Dan
This is such an idiotic post that I was not going to even respond to it, but I changed my mind.
Whether or not Anderson was "removed from the investigation" as you say, he was still head of CID, and the man ultimately held responsible for solving the case. Are you truly suggesting that Anderson would be out of the loop and not know about the case? In any case, Swanson was in dirct charge of the day to day running of the case, and was the one person who would see "every paper, every document, every report [and] every telegram" related to the case. It is probable that Swanson coordinated the identification, etc. Who are you referring to when you say "Other people in much better positions to know"?
Incidentally, I have never said that I think Kozminski was the Ripper. I said, I am conducting my research based on the premise that what Anderson said was true (more or less), and that he believed that Kozminski was the Ripper. That is the thesis I am trying to research, to see if it can be supported by additional evidence. I believe Kozminski MAY HAVE BEEN the Ripper. I believe he is a strong suspect. OK, got that?
Yes, you are correct Swanson did not say Kozminski was the Ripper, but your quote "And please get the quote right" is a bit childish. I have a 140 page document on Kozminski and I can dump any accurate quote you want on this thread. Swanson essentially as I said corroborated Anderson's story about a suspect being identified, and provided additional information about the identification. He did not dispute Anderson's claim that the identity was a definetly ascertained fact. But I think his statement is a clear corroboration that Kozminski was an important suspect. Swanson's personal belief as to whether this suspect was the Ripper is not known, but the tone of the marginalia suggests that he also believed he was a strong suspect.
"And that's complete and utter nonsense." Dan look, I wrote this post fast OK. I am trying to paint a GENERAL picture here. I am saying in general, the majority of the research on Kozminski is based on the premise that Anderson was wrong, and that it is not really constructive, because so few people are willing to entertain the possibility that he may have been right. This is without a doubt, in my opinion, the current state of affairs in Ripperology regarding Kozminski. Your idiotic post here proves my point.
"You can't be serious. The scientific method does not include assuming you are right, ignoring evidence"
What I said is you propose a thesis, and then try to see if you can find evidence that supports this thesis.
This is totally frustrating and pointless.
RH
This is such an idiotic post that I was not going to even respond to it, but I changed my mind.
Whether or not Anderson was "removed from the investigation" as you say, he was still head of CID, and the man ultimately held responsible for solving the case. Are you truly suggesting that Anderson would be out of the loop and not know about the case? In any case, Swanson was in dirct charge of the day to day running of the case, and was the one person who would see "every paper, every document, every report [and] every telegram" related to the case. It is probable that Swanson coordinated the identification, etc. Who are you referring to when you say "Other people in much better positions to know"?
Incidentally, I have never said that I think Kozminski was the Ripper. I said, I am conducting my research based on the premise that what Anderson said was true (more or less), and that he believed that Kozminski was the Ripper. That is the thesis I am trying to research, to see if it can be supported by additional evidence. I believe Kozminski MAY HAVE BEEN the Ripper. I believe he is a strong suspect. OK, got that?
Yes, you are correct Swanson did not say Kozminski was the Ripper, but your quote "And please get the quote right" is a bit childish. I have a 140 page document on Kozminski and I can dump any accurate quote you want on this thread. Swanson essentially as I said corroborated Anderson's story about a suspect being identified, and provided additional information about the identification. He did not dispute Anderson's claim that the identity was a definetly ascertained fact. But I think his statement is a clear corroboration that Kozminski was an important suspect. Swanson's personal belief as to whether this suspect was the Ripper is not known, but the tone of the marginalia suggests that he also believed he was a strong suspect.
"And that's complete and utter nonsense." Dan look, I wrote this post fast OK. I am trying to paint a GENERAL picture here. I am saying in general, the majority of the research on Kozminski is based on the premise that Anderson was wrong, and that it is not really constructive, because so few people are willing to entertain the possibility that he may have been right. This is without a doubt, in my opinion, the current state of affairs in Ripperology regarding Kozminski. Your idiotic post here proves my point.
"You can't be serious. The scientific method does not include assuming you are right, ignoring evidence"
What I said is you propose a thesis, and then try to see if you can find evidence that supports this thesis.
This is totally frustrating and pointless.
RH
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