Hi DRoy
To use Occam's Razor, eg. the simplest line, and so on, can lead to the argument that the Churchill quote -- about the Soviet Union -- is not applicable to Jack the Ripper because it is not a mystery.
It was solved in the Victorian era and revealed to be solved in the late Victorian and/or Edwardian eras.
That it was not solved is a notion, or theory, developed post-WWI in the 20's and, according to the razor, it is a myth because secondary sources are claiming to know more than people who were there.
Certain secondary sources such as Tom Cllen's 'Autumn of Terror' (1965), Paul Begg's 'Jack the Ripper--The Facts' (2006) and Stewart Evans and Paul Gainey's 'The Lodger (1995) argued this revisionist line; that it was solved as far as it could be without a trial at the time, or very soon after.
Because these authors favoured the veracity of different and competing primary sources (by different policemen) there is not a consensus about the, or an [alleged] Victorian police solution and probably never will be.
But that there were contemporaneous police who thought, or at least claimed -- three in public -- that there was a solution, about suspects whom we know really existed, is not in doubt.
To use Occam's Razor, eg. the simplest line, and so on, can lead to the argument that the Churchill quote -- about the Soviet Union -- is not applicable to Jack the Ripper because it is not a mystery.
It was solved in the Victorian era and revealed to be solved in the late Victorian and/or Edwardian eras.
That it was not solved is a notion, or theory, developed post-WWI in the 20's and, according to the razor, it is a myth because secondary sources are claiming to know more than people who were there.
Certain secondary sources such as Tom Cllen's 'Autumn of Terror' (1965), Paul Begg's 'Jack the Ripper--The Facts' (2006) and Stewart Evans and Paul Gainey's 'The Lodger (1995) argued this revisionist line; that it was solved as far as it could be without a trial at the time, or very soon after.
Because these authors favoured the veracity of different and competing primary sources (by different policemen) there is not a consensus about the, or an [alleged] Victorian police solution and probably never will be.
But that there were contemporaneous police who thought, or at least claimed -- three in public -- that there was a solution, about suspects whom we know really existed, is not in doubt.
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