Babybird:
"i was trying to say as kindly as i could that meaning had been subtly changed, eg from "cannot be ruled out", to "probably match"...those two statements are mutually exclusive in terms of meaning; as has been pointed out many times, they do not mean the same thing, even if someone says they do."
Well, that someone is Leander, BB. Please ponder that.
"are you seriously suggesting that Sam would be able to tell a copy document, but a professional document examiner presented with the same document would somehow be fooled and therefore come to an erroneous conclusion? "
Well, BB, from the outset, Sam did NOT tell it! It was not until another poster pointed it out that he realized what it was. And if Iremonger only had the signature from that paper to go by - and once again, we do not know what she DID have - there is no telling what she would have concluded. Perhaps that on balance, she believed that it was not a match?
"Arguments being made on the other side of the road appear to KNOW for a FACT there is a match, 100 % sure in a field which can never be 100% sure of anything, even from experts!"
If I am that "other side", BB, I am not saying 100 %. I am saying a very probable match, whereas Leander seem to be saying only a probale one. My reason for adding the "very" is the context.
"i find it strange that you did not pick up what was quite clear from many of those postings by Chris, which was that professionals consistently did better (and by a significant amount) at matching the correct documents than lay-persons."
Leander, BB, IS a professional, and so were the fifteen experts from the investigation.
Fisherman
"i was trying to say as kindly as i could that meaning had been subtly changed, eg from "cannot be ruled out", to "probably match"...those two statements are mutually exclusive in terms of meaning; as has been pointed out many times, they do not mean the same thing, even if someone says they do."
Well, that someone is Leander, BB. Please ponder that.
"are you seriously suggesting that Sam would be able to tell a copy document, but a professional document examiner presented with the same document would somehow be fooled and therefore come to an erroneous conclusion? "
Well, BB, from the outset, Sam did NOT tell it! It was not until another poster pointed it out that he realized what it was. And if Iremonger only had the signature from that paper to go by - and once again, we do not know what she DID have - there is no telling what she would have concluded. Perhaps that on balance, she believed that it was not a match?
"Arguments being made on the other side of the road appear to KNOW for a FACT there is a match, 100 % sure in a field which can never be 100% sure of anything, even from experts!"
If I am that "other side", BB, I am not saying 100 %. I am saying a very probable match, whereas Leander seem to be saying only a probale one. My reason for adding the "very" is the context.
"i find it strange that you did not pick up what was quite clear from many of those postings by Chris, which was that professionals consistently did better (and by a significant amount) at matching the correct documents than lay-persons."
Leander, BB, IS a professional, and so were the fifteen experts from the investigation.
Fisherman
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