Among people using historical methodology if you make a statement, with your name attached to it it, then that means you are proposing a theory.
For example, if I write the statement that Napoleon loved war, then that is a theory, not a fact, about that historical figure. For parts of his memoirs claim the very opposite; that he allegedly abhorred war, loved peace, being a family man, and setting up progressive educational policies, and so on.
The conventional wisdom about Macnagten is that he wrote a draft, and then he rewrote it very soon after, perhaps within hours.
That he removed details about which Macnaghten was unsure or were only hearsay, eg. that Druitt was a doctor, and details which were his personal opinion, eg. that the truth probably lay at the bottom of the Thames -- whatever that means?
But follow that line of thinking through to its conclusion.
A few years later, Mac utilized the rejected, inferior 'draft' to mislead the public, via Griffiths and Sims, into believing that a minor suspect, if much of a suspect at all, was almost certainly the fiend.
Furthermore, with Sims, Mac added details not in that 'draft' which further spun the story away from the historical Druitt, and away from the real investigation of 1888.
Why?
Let's assume that the official version, being official, is correct; that Druitt was one of several unlikely suspects, and no more than that.
So, in 1898 and for years after, Mac misled his pals, and through them the public -- didn't he? A minor suspect catapulted to the status of the almost-certain-murderer, case closed.
In 1913, the retiring Macnaghten wistfully spoke of the un-named Druitt as 'that remarkable man' and 'the most fascinating of criminals', and that he knew who he was and how he took his own life -- almost as if his guilt was, at least for him, a definitely, ascertained fact.
That's Mac being misleading too, isn't it, for the conventional wisdom argues that Macnaghten was not even sure what Druitt did for a living (he seems to have told Sims that 'Dr D' was unemployed!), actually knew almost nothing about him?!
His memoirs the following year, by implication, took credit for posthumously finding the un-named Druitt as the only suspect worth writing about, though obliquely.
That's totally misleading too, isn't it?
Either Mac was going to mislead the Liberal govt about his true opinion of Druitt in the official version, or he misled his family, his pals, his colleagues, and the public with the unofficial 'draft' version.
It can't be both.
For example, if I write the statement that Napoleon loved war, then that is a theory, not a fact, about that historical figure. For parts of his memoirs claim the very opposite; that he allegedly abhorred war, loved peace, being a family man, and setting up progressive educational policies, and so on.
The conventional wisdom about Macnagten is that he wrote a draft, and then he rewrote it very soon after, perhaps within hours.
That he removed details about which Macnaghten was unsure or were only hearsay, eg. that Druitt was a doctor, and details which were his personal opinion, eg. that the truth probably lay at the bottom of the Thames -- whatever that means?
But follow that line of thinking through to its conclusion.
A few years later, Mac utilized the rejected, inferior 'draft' to mislead the public, via Griffiths and Sims, into believing that a minor suspect, if much of a suspect at all, was almost certainly the fiend.
Furthermore, with Sims, Mac added details not in that 'draft' which further spun the story away from the historical Druitt, and away from the real investigation of 1888.
Why?
Let's assume that the official version, being official, is correct; that Druitt was one of several unlikely suspects, and no more than that.
So, in 1898 and for years after, Mac misled his pals, and through them the public -- didn't he? A minor suspect catapulted to the status of the almost-certain-murderer, case closed.
In 1913, the retiring Macnaghten wistfully spoke of the un-named Druitt as 'that remarkable man' and 'the most fascinating of criminals', and that he knew who he was and how he took his own life -- almost as if his guilt was, at least for him, a definitely, ascertained fact.
That's Mac being misleading too, isn't it, for the conventional wisdom argues that Macnaghten was not even sure what Druitt did for a living (he seems to have told Sims that 'Dr D' was unemployed!), actually knew almost nothing about him?!
His memoirs the following year, by implication, took credit for posthumously finding the un-named Druitt as the only suspect worth writing about, though obliquely.
That's totally misleading too, isn't it?
Either Mac was going to mislead the Liberal govt about his true opinion of Druitt in the official version, or he misled his family, his pals, his colleagues, and the public with the unofficial 'draft' version.
It can't be both.
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