Originally posted by John G
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostBut if you read, for instance, our discussion here in the forum about the descriptions of the statements of Morris Lewis you will see one example of the problem with newspapers.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostThe question should be: Should I, Steve, and everyone else on this forum, believe Pierre?
Believe what?
I do not even believe myself.
So what is the problem?
There are a lot of people here writing directly from there imagination, perhaps with the support of a few sources. Are they a problem, are they being asked "Should we believe you?". So why do you ask me this question.
I know why you ask the question. But you will have to wait and see.
I am honest but that doesn´t help. My honesty does not mean that I am right.
Regards, Pierre
Pierre
Sorry with the greatest of respect you do not say what the question should be when you are asked a question.
I agree with you Pierre, you have told us nothing, absolutely nothing!
How can anyone disbelieve nothing.
The question you propose is therefore meaningless.
You were asked a question which you so obviously do not wish to answer.
"I respectfully therefore ask, using the information from the site you quoted, how do you think we should view your reliability?"
Do you really think, people are all hanging with baited breath on your pronouncement, which may or may not ever come?
Yes there is a degree of "I wonder who?" but any real interest in the name died long ago.
The assumption that once the name is made public, the World of Ripperology will be destroyed is both comic and arrogant at the same time.
It will be just one more name on a long, long list; The only question is will it be a plausible name.
Of far more interest to most here are the new findings on Tumblety, and ongoing work on Bury, Kosminski, Lechmere and others.
We may never be able to prove who the killer was, and for many that is not the reason they are here, however of course for some it will be.
Ripperology as you like to refer to it, is as they say a Broad Church, of which you are a part my friend
regards
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David
Can I just add my views on the comments last night, for some reason they were about you; but said to me.
I am not aware of anyone spreading rumours about Pierre, and his threat to report you for apparently challenging his views, was somewhat bizzare.
Steve
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostDavid
Can I just add my views on the comments last night, for some reason they were about you; but said to me.
I am not aware of anyone spreading rumours about Pierre, and his threat to report you for apparently challenging his views, was somewhat bizzare.
SteveG U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostI have to say that the suggestion that I might be "spreading rumors" about Pierre, or anyone, is absolutely outrageous and should never have been posted on this forum.
In fact, the entire response is incomprehensible. This is a thread about sources in which Pierre made a post containing multiple references to sources with "tendencies". I have been trying to get to the bottom of whether this is an expression used by academic historians when analyzing documentary sources. Why my inquiries have prompted the above response is utterly baffling.
So don't stress too much about what a Troll like him claims.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostDavid
Can I just add my views on the comments last night, for some reason they were about you; but said to me.
I am not aware of anyone spreading rumours about Pierre, and his threat to report you for apparently challenging his views, was somewhat bizzare.
Steve
I hear Pierre is 5'11, and is a brunette. But don't tell anyone I said that.The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
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Sandy mustache?
Originally posted by Errata View PostI'll spread rumors about Pierre....
I hear Pierre is 5'11, and is a brunette. But don't tell anyone I said that.
I think this paranoia about David is new.Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Originally posted by Pcdunn View PostDoes Pierre wear a peaked cap and have broad shoulders, do you think?
I think this paranoia about David is new.The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
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IMHO, Pierre exhibits all the signs of stress. He's been perhaps the most proloific poster on these boards for some time and I think it may be starting to take its toll. It's a very high output to maintain and when one considers that for every post he authors, it will invariably generate even more posts. I sometimes wonder if he has time for anything else. I've nothing against Pierre, I'm sure he's a decent person, but I think he needs to step back for a while.
Best regards.wigngown 🇬🇧
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[QUOTE=Pierre;377256][QUOTE=Templarkommando;377223]Originally posted by Pierre View Post
Hi Templarcommando,
I see, and sure, if one would like to use the kind of logic that people use every day, that is not a scientific logic at all. But I can not use this type of thinking when I research the ripper case. It will not be useful.
There is no distinction between every day logic and scientific logic.
Robert Paul Churchill, in his book "Logic-an Introduction" states, "Logic is, in large part, the study of arguments and, in particular, a study of the conditions under which we are justified believing a conclusion."
So, let's suppose you make the claim that since newspapers of the time are unreliable then we cannot depend on the report of the inquest. If you make that claim then you are using logic. You have made a claim--that newspapers of the time are unreliable. This claim is also known as a premise. It's a premise because you are, theoretically, using it as a justification for believing something. There is a second claim--that we cannot depend on the report of the inquest, also known as the conclusion. In the background is a third, implicit, claim that the first claim is justification for believing the second claim. That's logic--one or more premises, a rule of inference, and a conclusion. Do you see that it doesn't matter whether we're talking about history? Or chemistry? Or mathematics? Or the tax code?
Well, the past it not simple and it is not true or false, so I can´t use this type of thinking. The past has left us some sources and we are the historians. So we need historical thinking.
We don´t use premises in history, instead, we establish facts from data. The facts can be more or less well established and the establishment of facts requires us to use source criticism.
What fun! Let me try this!
Premise A: All serial killers kill more than one victim.
Premise B: Jack the Ripper killed more than one victim.
Conclusion: Jack the Ripper was a serial killer.
But this is just a theoretical model. It is not connected to empirical sources. So how does it help us with the case?
No, I have not analysed this newspaper in particular so I do not know how reliable it is. And newspapers is not my speciality. But if you read, for instance, our discussion here in the forum about the descriptions of the statements of Morris Lewis you will see one example of the problem with newspapers. You may find these useful:
http://guides.osu.edu/newspapers/evaluating
http://www.library.illinois.edu/hpnl/guides/periodicals
"We don't have the direct inquest report for the Nichols murder, but we do have the Daily Telegraph's report on it. We need to find out if the Daily Telegraph's article is trustworthy. Let's examine a few inquest reports that the Telegraph did that we also have the direct inquest minutes from that are from around 1888 and see if they generally agree with one another. If they agree with one another then they are reliable, if they disagree they are unreliable and if their level of agreement is somewhere in between they posses a degree of reliability that is not complete."
Then the report would describe the various artifacts that they examined - both from the Telegraph and from contemporary inquests, and they might cite their sources in some sort of footnote system so that inquisitive minds could also look at the same things that they were testing. It would likely include the names of prominent researchers for the project and the universities with which they were associated.
Let's back up for a second. Earlier, I asked you to provide a way for me to peruse the studies you were referencing in addition to what they said. You gave me a couple of links - one to Ohio State University's page, and another to the University of Illinois' library page. The Illinois University Library page is a link to a tutorial on how to label the various parts of a newspaper. Admittedly, it does talk briefly about reliability, and it even mentions Jack the Ripper, but I don't - at this point - see what it has to do with our specific discussion about the reliability of the Nichols Inquest Report from the Telegraph. Could you point me to a particular objection that this tutorial raises about our specific discussion?
Now, let's look at the Ohio State University's page. This link was to a very monotone nine and a half minute youtube video about recognizing bias. There were a couple of points that I think are germaine to our discussion. Let me list those points here:
- Bias is neither good or bad.
- Understand the purpose of a source. Is the source known to be partisan?
- What is the difference between fact and opinion?
- Sources should be cited when facts presented are not common knowledge.
- What quality are the sources used? Are they scholarly journals? News articles? Editorials?
- Is the source of information one-sided? Does the author include or ignore other points of view?
- Consider the author's background. Authors are considered credible when their educational background matches the topic at hand.
- Is the publication partisan?
I have a couple of difficulties with the video. First, the information presented may be correct, but it doesn't cite any sources. Second, and perhaps more importantly, I don't see any reason why the Telegraph article ought to be discarded based on the video. Even if the telegraph did have a reason to publish partisan inquest reports (I don't think that it did) it would likely be political in nature. I don't see anything like that in this report - it doesn't seem to have anything to do with the Marquess of Salisbury's Government or even local London-centric politics. It seems to me that at the time of publication, the Telegraph's article would have been subject to great scrutiny if it had published non-factual information in its covering of legal proceedings like inquests - since there was a public record available at the time. In addition, other newspapers would have a lot to gain by casting aspersions on the Telegraph's credibility. Admittedly, the author isn't named in the article, but the source citation is clear - they were attempting to accurately copy the actual inquest report. If they weren't accurately reporting this, someone (likely another news paper) would have said something.
Finally, do you think that I missed anything from these sources that would add to this discussion? I like to think that I'm thorough, but I'll admit that I'm willing to hear what you have to say, and if I've missed the point, I'd really like to be corrected.
Many thanks,
Templarkommando
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostTemplarkommando
Can I congratulate you on a very interesting post.
some very fine points made
And I must say I was intrigued by Pierre's claim that "We don´t use premises in history, instead, we establish facts from data".
One of the books recommended by Pierre was 'On "What Is History?": From Carr and Elton to Rorty and White' by Keith Jenkins who is a former professor of historical theory at the University of Chichester, and someone who read Medieval and Modern History at the University of Nottingham. In his book, on page 15, Jenkins says:
"My approach has four parts….I start from the premise that there is a radical distinction to be drawn between ‘the past’ and ‘history’."
Someone should probably tell him that historians don't use premises.
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[QUOTE=Templarkommando;377377][QUOTE=Pierre;377256][QUOTE=Templarkommando;377223]
Pierre,
There is no distinction between every day logic and scientific logic.
How come you don´t know the differences between "every day logic" and scientific logic?
Might I ask if you have been studying at a university and if you have, what have you been studying?
Robert Paul Churchill, in his book "Logic-an Introduction" states, "Logic is, in large part, the study of arguments and, in particular, a study of the conditions under which we are justified believing a conclusion."
So, let's suppose you make the claim that since newspapers of the time are unreliable then we cannot depend on the report of the inquest. If you make that claim then you are using logic.
You have made a claim--that newspapers of the time are unreliable. This claim is also known as a premise.
It's a premise because you are, theoretically, using it as a justification for believing something.
There is a second claim--that we cannot depend on the report of the inquest, also known as the conclusion.
In the background is a third, implicit, claim that the first claim is justification for believing the second claim. That's logic--one or more premises, a rule of inference, and a conclusion. Do you see that it doesn't matter whether we're talking about history? Or chemistry? Or mathematics? Or the tax code?
I suspect that what I'm understanding is not what you're meaning. Let me tell you what occurs to me when you say that, and then ask you to explain how what I hear is not what you mean. You've made a claim--that newspapers of the time are unreliable.You've also made the claim that the past, and this claim is a claim about the past, is not true.
Therefore, I conclude that it's not true
that the newspapers of the time are unreliable, or, in other words, the newspapers of the time are reliable. You've also made the claim that the past is not false.
The past is not "true" or "false". The past is past. It is not within reach - if you do not have sources!
Therefore I conclude that it's not false that the newspapers of the time are unreliable, or, in other words, newspapers of the time are unreliable.
You've made two contradictory claims (that aren't the consequents of any assumptions), therefore I'm justified in rejecting your reasoning. I guess I need to ask what you mean when you say that the past is not true or false. Do you simply mean that we have no premises known with absolute certainty? Because if you do there is no problem using logic to justify shades of confidence.
What you have then, with absolute certainty, are things left to us by the elephants. Bones, places where they lived, rests of the lives of elephants. Items for interpretation.
You must use premises. You just call them something else. A fact becomes a premise when it's use to justify some conclusion. Data become premises when they are used to justify some conclusions.
BUT: Our measurement instrument are theoretical AND empirical. So if we use mathematics, we get calculations, if we use history, we get source criticism. They are NOT the same methods.
"Theory" is just a complicated word meaning a collection of acceptable statements.
"Theorem" is just a complicated word meaning a statement we accept as being true (to some level of conficence.)
"Jack the Ripper" is the name given to the man who killed five particular women in the East End and the Metropolitan Area of London in 1888" is just a theorem in one of numerous theories describing the deaths of women in the late nineteenth century.
"Jack the Ripper" is a social construction and an historical concept. But that operationalisation is on concept level, which is never enough. You must go down to definition level and make descriptions. And if they are made up of "every day logic" - you get ripperology!
How does it help us with the case? Well, if you and I both accept that newspapers of the time are unreliable,
and if we agree that unreliable newspapers allow us to justify the conclusion that we cannot depend on the report of the inquest, then we must both agree that we cannot depend on the report of the inquest (to some level of confidence). That's useful, isn't it?
See, in my mind, a study is when an expert on a topic partakes in some experiment to prove or disprove a hypothesis. So in the case of our particular disagreement, it might look something like this:
"We don't have the direct inquest report for the Nichols murder, but we do have the Daily Telegraph's report on it. We need to find out if the Daily Telegraph's article is trustworthy. Let's examine a few inquest reports that the Telegraph did that we also have the direct inquest minutes from that are from around 1888 and see if they generally agree with one another. If they agree with one another then they are reliable, if they disagree they are unreliable and if their level of agreement is somewhere in between they posses a degree of reliability that is not complete."
Then the report would describe the various artifacts that they examined - both from the Telegraph and from contemporary inquests, and they might cite their sources in some sort of footnote system so that inquisitive minds could also look at the same things that they were testing. It would likely include the names of prominent researchers for the project and the universities with which they were associated.
Let's back up for a second. Earlier, I asked you to provide a way for me to peruse the studies you were referencing in addition to what they said. You gave me a couple of links - one to Ohio State University's page, and another to the University of Illinois' library page. The Illinois University Library page is a link to a tutorial on how to label the various parts of a newspaper. Admittedly, it does talk briefly about reliability, and it even mentions Jack the Ripper, but I don't - at this point - see what it has to do with our specific discussion about the reliability of the Nichols Inquest Report from the Telegraph. Could you point me to a particular objection that this tutorial raises about our specific discussion?
Now, let's look at the Ohio State University's page. This link was to a very monotone nine and a half minute youtube video about recognizing bias. There were a couple of points that I think are germaine to our discussion. Let me list those points here:
- Bias is neither good or bad.
- Understand the purpose of a source. Is the source known to be partisan?
- What is the difference between fact and opinion?
- Sources should be cited when facts presented are not common knowledge.
- What quality are the sources used? Are they scholarly journals? News articles? Editorials?
- Is the source of information one-sided? Does the author include or ignore other points of view?
- Consider the author's background. Authors are considered credible when their educational background matches the topic at hand.
- Is the publication partisan?I have a couple of difficulties with the video. First, the information presented may be correct, but it doesn't cite any sources.
Second, and perhaps more importantly, I don't see any reason why the Telegraph article ought to be discarded based on the video.
Even if the telegraph did have a reason to publish partisan inquest reports (I don't think that it did) it would likely be political in nature. I don't see anything like that in this report - it doesn't seem to have anything to do with the Marquess of Salisbury's Government or even local London-centric politics. It seems to me that at the time of publication, the Telegraph's article would have been subject to great scrutiny if it had published non-factual information in its covering of legal proceedings like inquests - since there was a public record available at the time. In addition, other newspapers would have a lot to gain by casting aspersions on the Telegraph's credibility. Admittedly, the author isn't named in the article, but the source citation is clear - they were attempting to accurately copy the actual inquest report. If they weren't accurately reporting this, someone (likely another news paper) would have said something.
"...they were attempting to accurately copy the actual inquest report."
Here is a suggestion for you: do some comparisons between the Kelly inquest and the newspaper articles about it and you will find many problems.
Finally, do you think that I missed anything from these sources that would add to this discussion? I like to think that I'm thorough, but I'll admit that I'm willing to hear what you have to say, and if I've missed the point, I'd really like to be corrected.
Many thanks,
Templarkommando
Kind regards, PierreLast edited by Pierre; 04-16-2016, 11:07 AM.
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Hi Templarkommando and everyone,
I made a short analysis where I compared The Daily Telegraph and The Times for the inquest of Polly Nichols. There are many differences. I have not made a complete analysis since I have no time for that right now. But consider it a pilot study. Anyone can continue from here. I just selected The Times since that is the used by Evans & Skinner in "The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook). It could be any source, but these two are close in time. Here are the differences (underlined):
The Daily Telegraph:
Edward Walker deposed: I live at 15, Maidwell-street, Albany-road, Camberwell,...
The Times:
Edward Walker deposed: I live at 16, Maidswood-Road, Camberwell,...
The Daily Telegraph:
Inspector Jos. Helson deposed
The Times:
Inspector Helston...
The Daily Telegraph:
Police-constable Mizen said that at a quarter to four o'clock on Friday morning he was at the crossing, Hanbury-street, Baker's-row, when a carman who passed in company with another man informed him that he was wanted by a policeman in Buck's-row,
The Times:
Constable G. Mizen, 56 H, stated the at a quarter past 4 on Friday morning he was in Hanbury Street, Baker´s Row, and a man passing said ”You are wanted in Baker´s Row”.
The Daily Telegraph:
Inspector John Spratling,...A watchman of the Great Eastern Railway, whose box was fifty or sixty yards from the spot where the body was discovered, heard nothing particular on the night of the murder.
The Times:
A constable was on duty at the at the gate of the Great Eastern Railway yard, which was about 50 yards from the spot where the body was found.
The Daily Telegraph:
Chas. Andrew Cross, carman, said he had been in the employment of Messrs. Pickford and Co. for over twenty years. About half-past three on Friday he left his home to go to work, and he passed through Buck's-row
The Times:
George Cross, a carman, stated that he left home on Friday morning at 20 minutes past 3,...
There are more differences between the two newspapers as to the statements of Inspector Spratling, for example, but for others as well.
There are also many differences as to the dispositions of the texts in the two newspapers.
The Daily Telegraph uses the dialog between coroner and witness, but not all the time, and The Times does not use the dialogue.
Some details are missing in one article and some in the other.
Regards, PierreLast edited by Pierre; 04-16-2016, 12:51 PM.
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