Sam Flynn: I'm just keen that we avoid presenting speculations as if they were facts. What's immodest about that?
Well, chiefly your pointing out how you have told me upteen times not to call things fact prematurely, in spite of your own shortcomings in the exact same game.
Earlier, I said that the evidence of three witnesses need to be evaluated against the opinion of one doctor, in connection with Annie Chapman's time of death. That was a perfectly true statement - one must evaluate all relevant aspects of the evidence in a case as challenging as this.
And your evaluation has led you to say that we may treat it as a fact that Bagster Phillips was wrong. So much for being discerning.
On the basis of such considered evaluation it is perfectly legit to opine that the person whom Cadoche heard was probably Annie Chapman, but it is quite another to boldly assert that "Cadoche heard Chapman fall against the fence".
But it is not "legit" to opine that Lechmere would have worked the normal working manīs week. Aha.
That would be wrong. That would be to present an opinion as if it were an established fact, just like the assertion that "all the victims save Stride and Eddowes died on Lechmere's working mornings". We know no such thing, because we don't know what Lechmere's working mornings really were.
And we donīt know who Cadosch heard. We only know that he SAID he heard things.
We shouldn't present speculations as if they were statements of fact, because they can so easily mislead the reader, and even the writer ends up believing it in the end!
You talkinīto me? Or to yourself?
It's just a matter of wording, but it makes a huge difference.
So it does. We could end u with you amking people believe that I am a habitual liar, for example.
And we would not want that, would we?
Well, chiefly your pointing out how you have told me upteen times not to call things fact prematurely, in spite of your own shortcomings in the exact same game.
Earlier, I said that the evidence of three witnesses need to be evaluated against the opinion of one doctor, in connection with Annie Chapman's time of death. That was a perfectly true statement - one must evaluate all relevant aspects of the evidence in a case as challenging as this.
And your evaluation has led you to say that we may treat it as a fact that Bagster Phillips was wrong. So much for being discerning.
On the basis of such considered evaluation it is perfectly legit to opine that the person whom Cadoche heard was probably Annie Chapman, but it is quite another to boldly assert that "Cadoche heard Chapman fall against the fence".
But it is not "legit" to opine that Lechmere would have worked the normal working manīs week. Aha.
That would be wrong. That would be to present an opinion as if it were an established fact, just like the assertion that "all the victims save Stride and Eddowes died on Lechmere's working mornings". We know no such thing, because we don't know what Lechmere's working mornings really were.
And we donīt know who Cadosch heard. We only know that he SAID he heard things.
We shouldn't present speculations as if they were statements of fact, because they can so easily mislead the reader, and even the writer ends up believing it in the end!
You talkinīto me? Or to yourself?
It's just a matter of wording, but it makes a huge difference.
So it does. We could end u with you amking people believe that I am a habitual liar, for example.
And we would not want that, would we?
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