hi all
I'm not very scientifically-minded but i know some of you out there are, (Sam! where are you?) and i was thinking in bed last night, as you do, and i just wondered if there could be some sort of attempt at doing something statistical with the modern information we know of and linking this back to the known suspects to perhaps shed any chink of light on viability?
I'm sure any "results" would be spurious and would no way be intended to prove anything at all...i just thought it might be interesting...
anyone curious about what i mean, read on...anyone thinking, "what the hell is this woman on? she must be crazy" stop reading now and save yourself the pain!
What i thought was, there are obvious aspects of psychological profiling that weren't known about at the time, as well as some contemporary conjecture during the investigations into the killings themselves...as an example, well, as two examples, we have the suggestion that the killer was local, and the suggestion that the killer may have had medical "skill" (or not).
So, taking the first, that the killer was local; what is the evidence that suggests or contradicts this? All killings within a particular locality; fast escape from crime-scenes; appeared to fit in/not noticed as unusual in areas where he stalked his prey.
Taking the second, that the killer had medical skill; what evidence suggests or contradicts this? Various Doctors' reports to inquests, nature of mutilations, type of knife used if known. Etc Etc.
Anyone still with me at this stage? Sorry this is a long post but i want to try to explain myself clearly. Congratulations if you've got this far!
Is it/would it be possible to establish a generally agreed list of aspects of this nature (i know..."generally agreed" on these boards is always highly contentious, but maybe we could just do this for once? )and place them in numerical priority.
Using the above examples again, if more Ripperologists thought it was much more likely that the killer was local than that he was medically skilled in any way, just using those two, one would have a value of say 10, the other of, say, 5....but replicate this across the range of particular options. (Yes i know i go on a bit...but you're still reading! )
So at the end of this process we would have a list of say ten or twelve relevant factors such as local man, medical skill, possibly foreign, height, etc etc...all with a numerical value with the highest numerical value for that we are most certain of going down to the lowest which we are least certain of.
Once that is done, go through the list of known suspects, giving them the numerical value that matches each attribute they share with the list, so for example, if local to the area is worth ten, and we find someone like Chapman whose barber shop was within walking distance of the all the canonical murders, he would score ten in that section.
Of course there are problems and debateable areas, but i just thought this might be a not-too serious way to look at the case from another perspective and see if it threw up anything interesting.
(I mention Chapman not because i think this method would "prove" him to be the Ripper, just because he is someone i know was local to the area and would fit that example i was using)
I'm well aware this wouldn't prove anything of itself...i think it might be a worthwile exercise though.
Any (polite?) thoughts?
I'm not very scientifically-minded but i know some of you out there are, (Sam! where are you?) and i was thinking in bed last night, as you do, and i just wondered if there could be some sort of attempt at doing something statistical with the modern information we know of and linking this back to the known suspects to perhaps shed any chink of light on viability?
I'm sure any "results" would be spurious and would no way be intended to prove anything at all...i just thought it might be interesting...
anyone curious about what i mean, read on...anyone thinking, "what the hell is this woman on? she must be crazy" stop reading now and save yourself the pain!
What i thought was, there are obvious aspects of psychological profiling that weren't known about at the time, as well as some contemporary conjecture during the investigations into the killings themselves...as an example, well, as two examples, we have the suggestion that the killer was local, and the suggestion that the killer may have had medical "skill" (or not).
So, taking the first, that the killer was local; what is the evidence that suggests or contradicts this? All killings within a particular locality; fast escape from crime-scenes; appeared to fit in/not noticed as unusual in areas where he stalked his prey.
Taking the second, that the killer had medical skill; what evidence suggests or contradicts this? Various Doctors' reports to inquests, nature of mutilations, type of knife used if known. Etc Etc.
Anyone still with me at this stage? Sorry this is a long post but i want to try to explain myself clearly. Congratulations if you've got this far!
Is it/would it be possible to establish a generally agreed list of aspects of this nature (i know..."generally agreed" on these boards is always highly contentious, but maybe we could just do this for once? )and place them in numerical priority.
Using the above examples again, if more Ripperologists thought it was much more likely that the killer was local than that he was medically skilled in any way, just using those two, one would have a value of say 10, the other of, say, 5....but replicate this across the range of particular options. (Yes i know i go on a bit...but you're still reading! )
So at the end of this process we would have a list of say ten or twelve relevant factors such as local man, medical skill, possibly foreign, height, etc etc...all with a numerical value with the highest numerical value for that we are most certain of going down to the lowest which we are least certain of.
Once that is done, go through the list of known suspects, giving them the numerical value that matches each attribute they share with the list, so for example, if local to the area is worth ten, and we find someone like Chapman whose barber shop was within walking distance of the all the canonical murders, he would score ten in that section.
Of course there are problems and debateable areas, but i just thought this might be a not-too serious way to look at the case from another perspective and see if it threw up anything interesting.
(I mention Chapman not because i think this method would "prove" him to be the Ripper, just because he is someone i know was local to the area and would fit that example i was using)
I'm well aware this wouldn't prove anything of itself...i think it might be a worthwile exercise though.
Any (polite?) thoughts?
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