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PJ. You don't need me to tell you this. Your opinions are as valid as anyone else's.
I'm really interested to read everyone's thoughts. Because we don't agree it's not the end of the world.
We're all adults. Let's act that way.
Well if everyone else can behave that way, i'm happy to respond. However I simply didn't start it.
PJ. You don't need me to tell you this. Your opinions are as valid as anyone else's.
I'm really interested to read everyone's thoughts. Because we don't agree it's not the end of the world.
Hi NTS
If everyone agreed with each other how dull this site would be
The point is that you claimed Davies made no comment about the final sentence on the endpaper. The fact is that you have no idea whether he made a comment about it or not, because you haven't seen the report.
Speculate as much as you like, but please don't misrepresent the facts to suit your speculations.
The point is that you claimed Davies made no comment about the final sentence on the endpaper. The fact is that you have no idea whether he made a comment about it or not, because you haven't seen the report.
Speculate as much as you like, but please don't misrepresent the facts to suit your speculations.
As i said Chris its hardly wild speculation unless your suggesting that the report might contain radicle new information. And given the importance of that report I find that highly unlikely. I was referring to what is currently known and I think my assumption that we would know if Dr Davies thought there was a difference in the end annotation is good.
Again we can debate the exact meaning of the word 'probability' all day.
However Speculation though I agree it is (by necessity) i stand by my claim that its probable that the last phraze
Kosminski was the suspect-DSS
Was written by the same hand. Do you have any logical arguement against this view?
or are you simply concerned about my use of report instead of 'reported on the internet'?
I'm not. I'm simply saying that if there were a difference in the end annotation its reasonable to assume that it would have been commented on.
I think that's a reasonable assumption,
Pirate
Actually you are quite right. If there was a difference in the end annotation it IS reasonable to assume it would have been commented on. And there was a difference: it was written in different pencils and was apparently the only time in the marginalia that the difference appeared.
So one has to wonder, considering it is reasonable to assume that the difference would be commented on, why this difference was left out of the A-Z entirely and was not brought to light when the marginalia was.
Being that it is only reasonable that differences be commented on and all.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
Actually you are quite right. If there was a difference in the end annotation it IS reasonable to assume it would have been commented on. And there was a difference: it was written in different pencils and was apparently the only time in the marginalia that the difference appeared.
So one has to wonder, considering it is reasonable to assume that the difference would be commented on, why this difference was left out of the A-Z entirely and was not brought to light when the marginalia was.
Being that it is only reasonable that differences be commented on and all.
Well I guess today’s debate is how Small is Small rather than what is or isn’t probable. If the differences are very, very small perhaps it is reasonable that they weren’t noticed in the original observations.
My observation is that any difference in the end note between: ‘Kosminski was the suspect’ and the rest of the annotation would not be small it would be a giant elephant, which almost certainly would have been commented on.
I suggest you ask those who compiled the A to Z in 1996 what the circumstances were at the time. However it seems to me unreasonable that they should be expected to comment on expert opinion that hadn’t even been made at that time, expert opinion which incidentally doesn’t appear (given not published in full) to contradict there original conclusion even if their original observations were less detailed.
I'll caveat that with the word 'Probably' wasnt in the original AtoZ as i dont wish to run backwards.
Actually you are quite right. If there was a difference in the end annotation it IS reasonable to assume it would have been commented on.
It is reasonable to assume it would have been commented on in the report, but we don't know whether it was commented on in the report, because we haven't seen the report.
All we have is five sentences Davies came up with for a press release. There may well be more detail in the report. Or there may not. As we haven't seen the report, we don't know.
It is reasonable to assume it would have been commented on in the report, but we don't know whether it was commented on in the report, because we haven't seen the report.
All we have is five sentences Davies came up with for a press release. There may well be more detail in the report. Or there may not. As we haven't seen the report, we don't know.
Hi Chris
I'm certainly not disagreeing with you. However I am speculating that he is unlikely to have made these comments and left more important bombshells out, it wouldn't make sense. Thats all i'm trying to communicate.
It is reasonable to assume it would have been commented on in the report, but we don't know whether it was commented on in the report, because we haven't seen the report.
Yes, but the Davis report was commissioned YEARS after the marginalia was first reported on and only after someone else viewed the original and wondered about the discrepancies in the pencils and why that had never been mentioned. And I am less interested in what the Davis report did or did not say as I am in why the discrepancies were not put flat on the table from the get-go for all to judge and make up their own mind about.
To me, the Davis report might need never have been commissioned if the discrepancies in the pencil were examined the first time around, and ALL relevant data examined during the first examination and reporting on the marginalia.
Let all Oz be agreed;
I need a better class of flying monkeys.
I'm certainly not disagreeing with you. However I am speculating that he is unlikely to have made these comments and left more important bombshells out, it wouldn't make sense. Thats all i'm trying to communicate.
I don't see how it would be a "more important bombshell" at all. But as this is indeed all speculation it's hardly worth arguing about.
I haven’t seen Paul’s article in Ripperologist perhaps that contains some answers?
However as I understand photocopies were sent to an expert for verification. Why that was I have no idea. As Stewart observed yesterday, there was also a mix-up with the copy of Swanson’s handwriting.
My assumptions is that the photocopy in those days was in B/W so the difference in colour simply wouldn’t have been observable.
And my comments yesterday were it’s easy to criticize Paul in hindsight but perhaps photocopies were the only access he was aloud to the marginalia.
It was after all in private not public hands at the time. If Jim refused to let he original out of his sight and the expert would not travel, then perhaps this was seen as a sensible solution, though I admit I find it surprising.
However, remember that the handwriting wasn’t the only tool for authentication at Paul’s disposal.
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