Hi,
This isnīt anything like the interesting thread of Fishermans "If", where he discusses a theoretical model about his own suspect.
This thread is simply about the theoretical model of the rewriting of history.
Today I am thinking about the implications of finding a person and proving that he was the serial killer Jack the Ripper.
Literature and movies about the murders all have one problem: You never get the real story about the killer. If you did, we wouldnīt be here now. So you canīt see a picture of the killer in the plots. You see shadows or nothing. You get a lot of historical work on the fact around him; the victims, their background, the environment, the people in Spitalfields and so on. But still - only murders and no murderer.
Well now: IF my data sources will be sufficient to prove who he was (I hope they wonīt), history will most certainly be rewritten.
But what kind of history will it be?
First of all it will be quiet a different history and not what people have expected or read before. It will tell of things never heard of in this case.
The history of Jack the Ripper will be explanatory. It will clearly describe his motive for comitting the crimes. Also and not least important, it will explain the motive for the methods he used and the places he choose for his crimes.
Of course it must describe his own life. Where he was born, who his parents were and what he did for a living. His own life as well as his parents life were dramatic and a bit tragic and this side of his own history will have to be described as well.
I think that people will understand why he became this particular killer when they get his background. The implications of who he was and why things happened as they did will also throw a new light on the established society in relation to his crimes. I donīt think people will be happy reading about these aspects.
Perhaps the most important thing in the new history about Jack the Ripper is throwing light on some things in the previous histories of him that seem hard to understand for us. He did do things to make people understand who he was and there was actually some people who knew. But this has been buried in history. So part of rewriting history will be to "let the killer speak". Of course, this aspect is rather unpleasant. But it has do be done.
Well, this is only a theoretical model about rewriting history, which I call "if". It hasnīt happened yet and perhaps it never will. Who knows, maybe someone else solves this case and I can quit.
Thanks to you all for reading this. Knowing that youīre there, getting angry at me, is support enough for me.
Regards Pierre
This isnīt anything like the interesting thread of Fishermans "If", where he discusses a theoretical model about his own suspect.
This thread is simply about the theoretical model of the rewriting of history.
Today I am thinking about the implications of finding a person and proving that he was the serial killer Jack the Ripper.
Literature and movies about the murders all have one problem: You never get the real story about the killer. If you did, we wouldnīt be here now. So you canīt see a picture of the killer in the plots. You see shadows or nothing. You get a lot of historical work on the fact around him; the victims, their background, the environment, the people in Spitalfields and so on. But still - only murders and no murderer.
Well now: IF my data sources will be sufficient to prove who he was (I hope they wonīt), history will most certainly be rewritten.
But what kind of history will it be?
First of all it will be quiet a different history and not what people have expected or read before. It will tell of things never heard of in this case.
The history of Jack the Ripper will be explanatory. It will clearly describe his motive for comitting the crimes. Also and not least important, it will explain the motive for the methods he used and the places he choose for his crimes.
Of course it must describe his own life. Where he was born, who his parents were and what he did for a living. His own life as well as his parents life were dramatic and a bit tragic and this side of his own history will have to be described as well.
I think that people will understand why he became this particular killer when they get his background. The implications of who he was and why things happened as they did will also throw a new light on the established society in relation to his crimes. I donīt think people will be happy reading about these aspects.
Perhaps the most important thing in the new history about Jack the Ripper is throwing light on some things in the previous histories of him that seem hard to understand for us. He did do things to make people understand who he was and there was actually some people who knew. But this has been buried in history. So part of rewriting history will be to "let the killer speak". Of course, this aspect is rather unpleasant. But it has do be done.
Well, this is only a theoretical model about rewriting history, which I call "if". It hasnīt happened yet and perhaps it never will. Who knows, maybe someone else solves this case and I can quit.
Thanks to you all for reading this. Knowing that youīre there, getting angry at me, is support enough for me.
Regards Pierre
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