Coincidences, possibilities and probabilities

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    This is not a criminal trial.
    I'm aware of that Pierre, but surely the evidential standards for proving that someone committed these murders are the same, or similar, no?

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    How many criminal trials are you aware of, Pierre, which use "source criticism" to reach a verdict?
    This is not a criminal trial.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=David Orsam;374065]This isn't true.
    QUOTE]

    Hi David,

    So you have an opinion. But no one understands why, since you simply say "this isnīt true".

    Can you elaborate on this?

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    That is why we must use source criticism.
    How many criminal trials are you aware of, Pierre, which use "source criticism" to reach a verdict?

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    This isn't true.

    No idea where you get such a notion from.
    Nor do I.

    But remember Pierre recently said, he doesn't need to be right.


    Evidence is evidence some good some pretty much worthless.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=Errata;374048]
    But the meeting is unintentional. Neither went to the restaurant in the hopes of running into their acquaintance, so running into that acquaintance is a coincidence. Unplanned, unintentional, unforeseen.
    Hi Errata,

    Meetings donīt have intentions...

    But jokes aside now, a coincidence (co-incidence) is built on two elements which are seemingly connected to each other. The problem is that WE are making the connection.


    One thing I see fairly often is something along the lines of, What are the odds that Lechmere was going to find Nichol's body that morning? Isn't that a coincidence?
    The mathematical calculation of odds is not relevant in this context.

    Had he previously found another mutilated woman, then it would be a coincidence that a guy who found a mutilated body found another mutilated body.

    But of course believing that he is the killer means it wasn't a coincidence, so therefore that particular term gets taken off the table.
    This coincidence is functionally the same as all coincidences:

    "Two events seem to be connected".


    In Fishermanīs theory the two events are:

    Event 1: Lechmere stands in the street where a body lies.
    Event 2: Lechmere murdered Polly Nichols.


    There are many problems with this set of events. Firstly, the problem of coincidence itself. Did Event 1 follow after Event 2? Or did 1 follow after Event 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 or 10?

    But a coincidence is a specific thing. It is two or more uninfluenced and often unintentional choices with no causal connection whatsoever resulting in something remarkable.

    A guy gets shot twice on two separate occasions by a guy dressed as a clown is a coincidence. Unless he going around pissing off clowns, at which point it isn't. No causal connection, coincidence. Causal connection, just odd.
    Well, it is in the eye of the beholder. That is why we must use source criticism.

    King regards, Pierre
    Last edited by Pierre; 03-18-2016, 01:14 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post

    Coincidence is not by definition unintentional.
    This isn't true at all.

    Again, I have no idea where you have picked up such an idea.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    But to become "evidence" it has to have a high probability and that probability must be connected to some important event in the life of the "suspect".
    This isn't true.

    No idea where you get such a notion from.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    When I read that I found some syncronicity with my own perspective on some of the Canonical murders.

    Perhaps one or more had to be eliminated coincidentally while someone else was committing random murders.
    Hi,

    That sounds interesting, could you please elaborate a bit on it?

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View Post
    for example. Arthur Leigh, as a Zodiac suspect, lived less than 100 yards from where the first victim, a waitress, was working.

    It doesn't prove anything, but it creates cause for investigation.

    Maybe I'm interpreting circumstantial evidence wrong, I see it as something that it's worth looking into.
    Hi,

    do you mean that this single "fact" is enough to start an investigation? A lot of people lived less than 100 yards from where she was working I guess - or was he the only one living there? And why exactly 100 yards, why not 99 or 101?

    I am not the right person to say that your interpretation is "wrong". I find it interesting, and worth looking into (!).

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    If they are friends, there is a good chance they have similar tastes and have been to that restaurant before, either singly or together, which would lessen the coincidence.

    Conversely, if two unrelated strangers met at the restaurant by chance and got talking, and found both had the surname Lechmere - now THAT would be a coincidence. No more, no less.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    Hi Caz,

    So I guess you are saying that we can not establish or refute a "coincidence" if we have not studied the context of the event. Yes, this is important. And if the data for the context is pore? Is it better to use a probability?

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View Post
    coincidences are circumstantial evidences at best.

    I like Lechmere as a potential suspect for Nichols, but does that make him JtR? no.
    I like Lechmere as a witness and no amount of BS is going to convince me otherwise.

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Hi Errata,

    Coincidence is not by definition unintentional.

    An example:

    Mr X wants to go to Restaurant A.

    Mr Y wants to go to restaurant A.

    At restaurant A, Mr X meets his friend Mr Y. and says:

    - What a coincidence!

    Both had intentions and the consequence of the intentions was a coincidence. They had not conspired to go to Restaurant A.

    Regards, Pierre
    But the meeting is unintentional. Neither went to the restaurant in the hopes of running into their acquaintance, so running into that acquaintance is a coincidence. Unplanned, unintentional, unforeseen.

    One thing I see fairly often is something along the lines of, What are the odds that Lechmere was going to find Nichol's body that morning? Isn't that a coincidence?

    No it's not. She was dead in the path and at the time he generally took to work on a fairly regular basis, to the point that he actually also runs into the guy he usually walks with. If there was a bear lying in the street that day he would have found it. So of course he found the mutilated woman. The only way for him not to find Nichols that morning was for him to either have randomly chosen a different path that day, or to have been beated to the punch by a street sweeper or something who found the body before Lechmere did.

    Not a coincidence. Unintended, sure. Inevitable, maybe. Had he previously found another mutilated woman, then it would be a coincidence that a guy who found a mutilated body found another mutilated body. But of course believing that he is the killer means it wasn't a coincidence, so therefore that particular term gets taken off the table.

    **** happens. Some of it ironic, some of it is fantastic, some of it defies the odds. But a coincidence is a specific thing. It is two or more uninfluenced and often unintentional choices with no causal connection whatsoever resulting in something remarkable.

    A guy gets shot twice on two separate occasions by a guy dressed as a clown is a coincidence. Unless he going around pissing off clowns, at which point it isn't. No causal connection, coincidence. Causal connection, just odd.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Hi Errata,

    Coincidence is not by definition unintentional.

    An example:

    Mr X wants to go to Restaurant A.

    Mr Y wants to go to restaurant A.

    At restaurant A, Mr X meets his friend Mr Y. and says:

    - What a coincidence!

    Both had intentions and the consequence of the intentions was a coincidence. They had not conspired to go to Restaurant A.

    Regards, Pierre
    When I read that I found some syncronicity with my own perspective on some of the Canonical murders.

    Perhaps one or more had to be eliminated coincidentally while someone else was committing random murders.

    Leave a comment:


  • SirJohnFalstaff
    replied
    Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post
    When does a coincidence become circumstantial evidence?
    for example. Arthur Leigh, as a Zodiac suspect, lived less than 100 yards from where the first victim, a waitress, was working.

    It doesn't prove anything, but it creates cause for investigation.

    Maybe I'm interpreting circumstantial evidence wrong, I see it as something that it's worth looking into.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X