Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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What makes Druitt a viable suspect?
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
- Jeff
PS. Sorry, just back from pub quizz night. We came 6th overall. Unfortunately, there were, apparently, only 6 teams.
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
I can't believe I'm wasting my time with people who can't grasp the excrutiatingly simple concept that a suspect is a person someone has suspected. Trevor is like one of those dolls with a string in its back that recites one of half a dozen stock phrases every time you pull it - pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted.' Pull: 'You need to take a trip to Specsavers...' Pull: 'You have your head stuck in the sand...' And on and on, until Pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted', and the merry-go-round begins all over again. It's like a really, really bad version of Groundhog Day. You know that painting 'The Scream'? That's a painting of someone confronted with nonsense like this.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
No, he is mentioned in a document with errors. The vast majority of written documents will have errors. The MM was probably written based upon memory, which we know to be extremely error prone in details (as per the errors in the MM) but less so in gist (making the suspicions worth looking into from a historical perspective). The MM is not, given it's errors, sufficient to exclude all others. It is, however, all that is necessary to validate research into MJD's life. You don't have to think that he's likely to be guilty (and I don't) to still accept that he's worth looking into. I don't think "I'm right" just because I don't think MJD is guilty - prove it to me, please. A few factual errors is not proof of his innocence, it simply means he might not be guilty, but the fact he's mentioned at all proves there was, to some degree, suspicion against him. So, prove that was unfounded, or prove it wasn't. That's what I expect from all suspect based approaches, Druitt or otherwise. My own interest is more, well, boring, I'm mostly trying to figure out where the forks in the road are - how far can we get before we end up hitting the wall of unable to make a call?
- Jeff
PS. Sorry, just back from pub quizz night. We came 6th overall. Unfortunately, there were, apparently, only 6 teams.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
I can't believe I'm wasting my time with people who can't grasp the excrutiatingly simple concept that a suspect is a person someone has suspected. Trevor is like one of those dolls with a string in its back that recites one of half a dozen stock phrases every time you pull it - pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted.' Pull: 'You need to take a trip to Specsavers...' Pull: 'You have your head stuck in the sand...' And on and on, until Pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted', and the merry-go-round begins all over again. It's like a really, really bad version of Groundhog Day. You know that painting 'The Scream'? That's a painting of someone confronted with nonsense like this.
I understand your frustration. It's "reviewer 2" comments. But seriously, as I see it, this all boils down to definitions, you are insisting suspect means "those who have been suspected" and Trevor means "those form who guilt is likely", and the two definitions clash because the same word is being used for two very different concepts. Those definitions reflect very different ... "starting points"? ... in terms of backgrounds. In the end, though, it boils down to the same thing, everyone admits the MM is not gospel, it has demonstrably been proven to have factual errors. But, everyone also knows it expresses MacNaughten's beliefs, and so reflects his suspicions at the time, or to be even more cautious, what he was willing to state as his suspicions. After that, we're arguing about whether or not the word "suspect" applies, and that depends entirely on things other than the evidence we have, it depends upon the concept we hold the word "suspect" to mean. Trevor, as one example, holds it to mean something very different from what you hold it to mean. You appear to hold it to mean "one against whom suspicion has been laid", and Trevor appears to hold it to mean "one for whom guilt appears likely", and those are not the same concept. The argument reflects differences that arise from the complexity of having a common language.
- JeffLast edited by JeffHamm; 05-15-2019, 11:50 AM.
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Originally posted by The Baron View Post
Yes I know!
I have the words of Abberline "Absolutely Nothing"
The Baron
If were playing the game of Ripperological Top Trumps then Mac trumps Fred every time.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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You appear to hold it to mean "one against whom suspicion has been laid", and Trevor appears to hold it to mean "one for whom guilt appears likely",
I think that Trevor is obfuscating and time wasting on a quibble. In terms of all of us looking at the ripper case then if someone is suspected by someone then they are a suspect. Maybrick is suspect, Sir William Gull is a suspect, Lewis Carroll is a suspect. Then we, as individuals, weigh up the available information and arrive at an opinion. It’s only those that have set there faces against Druitt as a suspect who are arguing that black is white.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
You don't know what the evidence was. And it is very likely that we'll never know what the evidence was. But unless Macnaghten based his suspicions on thin air, it's reasonable to conclude that evidence existed.
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Originally posted by The Baron View Post
Yes I know!
I have the words of Abberline "Absolutely Nothing"
The Baron
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
what evidence do you have that Macnaghten was a fool who plumped for a suspect against whom there was no evidence?
I've told you, but you chose to ignore this, Ostrog!
Read what the historian Sugden wrote about Macnaghten suspecting Ostrog, and tell me if you can find the word Misleading somewhere.
There was absulotely nothing, and please don't tell me that you can judge and evaluate the case now better than Abberline.
The Baron
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
I can't believe I'm wasting my time with people who can't grasp the excrutiatingly simple concept that a suspect is a person someone has suspected. Trevor is like one of those dolls with a string in its back that recites one of half a dozen stock phrases every time you pull it - pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted.' Pull: 'You need to take a trip to Specsavers...' Pull: 'You have your head stuck in the sand...' And on and on, until Pull: 'History is there to be challenged and not readily accepted', and the merry-go-round begins all over again. It's like a really, really bad version of Groundhog Day. You know that painting 'The Scream'? That's a painting of someone confronted with nonsense like this.
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Originally posted by PaulB View Post
And when did Abberline's investigation or the investigation of which he speaks take place? Did he know the information received by the police several years after mid-1889, bearing in mind that he retired two years before the memorandum was written? what evidence do you have that Macnaghten was a fool who plumped for a suspect against whom there was no evidence?
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