Originally posted by David Orsam
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One Incontrovertible, Unequivocal, Undeniable Fact Which Refutes the Diary
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut that "coincidence" has always existed. You're just following the narrative of the author of the diary.
What if the author of the diary had written: "Aha, I'll go and kill women in London because it begins with the letter "L" just like Liverpool"?
Would that have impressed you as another coincidence?
Not the same odds at all!
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostThe coincidence does not lie in the 'well-established' element. The coincidence lies in the rather convenient fact (now) that Maybrick was addicted to arsenic and also took strychnine.
If these facts were well-established in 1889, it does not change the coincidence which once again worked in the hoaxer's favour.
I think you have focused on my use of 'well-established' where you may have been better employed arguing that his addiction was a not a rather convenient coincidence for our hoaxer.
How is that a "coincidence" as opposed to a forger knowing something about Maybrick that they had read in a book?
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostNo, you are making the claim so I want you to tell me.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostOn our reliable coincidence scale, it would warrant a 0 out of 10. It's very like John G absurdly arguing that the probability of finding all six significant adults in Maybrick's life cryptically hidden in the GSG was exactly the same as the probability that you would find the constituent letters somewhere in it.
Not the same odds at all!
So, if the diary is a forgery, it would mean no more than the forger has taken an already existing "coincidence" and woven it into the story.
If you want to give the forger marks out of ten for spotting this fact and creatively incorporating it into the journal then fine but it's not something that goes one jot towards showing that Maybrick wrote the diary or was Jack the Ripper.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut it's not a "coincidence" at all. If the diary is a forgery then all it means is that the author has read a book in which it is said that Maybrick was addicted to arsenic and incorporated it into the bogus journal.
How is that a "coincidence" as opposed to a forger knowing something about Maybrick that they had read in a book?
The hoaxer had the good fortune to find a candidate who was addicted to arsenic/strychnine which provided the psychopathology of the murders.
It is a coincidence unless you argue that it was discovering this fact which caused our hoaxer to focus in on Maybrick as his or her fake Jack.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostYeah, I've compared them and they look different to me.
You have an expert opinion that they are the same do you?
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut there's no "odds" involved here at all. The information about there being a Whitechapel in both London and Liverpool was available to any hoaxer.
So, if the diary is a forgery, it would mean no more than the forger has taken an already existing "coincidence" and woven it into the story.
If you want to give the forger marks out of ten for spotting this fact and creatively incorporating it into the journal then fine but it's not something that goes one jot towards showing that Maybrick wrote the diary or was Jack the Ripper.
You can argue that any of these coincidences are not a coincidence because they were the reason why the hoaxer chose Maybrick as his guilty party, but you can't wish them all away in that way.Last edited by Iconoclast; 02-04-2018, 12:22 PM.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostRead it properly. It wasn't simply to frighten her. It was to "frighten the truth" out of her.
In attempting to frighten the truth out of her about her affair, he attempted to terrify her by telling her that her affair had directly led to his murderous acts in Whitechapel.
That fits.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostIf every man who lived in 1888 was addicted to arsenic/strychnine, I'd agree with you. I have a suspicion they weren't.
The hoaxer had the good fortune to find a candidate who was addicted to arsenic/strychnine which provided the psychopathology of the murders.
It is a coincidence unless you argue that it was discovering this fact which caused our hoaxer to focus in on Maybrick as his or her fake Jack.
Maybrick's wife having an affair for example (which, of course, also features in the story).
All that's happened (one could argue) is that the hoaxer has incorporated a well known fact about Maybrick into a fictional story. That's how any author of fiction based loosely on fact would work.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostYeah, I've compared them and they look different to me.
You have an expert opinion that they are the same do you?
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostIn what sense have I not read it properly?
In attempting to frighten the truth out of her about her affair, he attempted to terrify her by telling her that her affair had directly led to his murderous acts in Whitechapel.
That fits.
On the other hand, Maybrick telling her that he already knew information about the affair and had been making inquiries is the oldest trick in the book to make someone confess to something. It's such an obvious fit that we simply don't need to invent something about Jack the Ripper which is not mentioned in the letter.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut this is bizarre. If Maybrick hadn't been addicted to arsenic, a hoaxer would simply have come up with another form of psychopathology.
Maybrick's wife having an affair for example (which, of course, also features in the story).
All that's happened (one could argue) is that the hoaxer has incorporated a well known fact about Maybrick into a fictional story. That's how any author of fiction based loosely on fact would work.
The point is that the addiction to arsenic was a most convenient fact - perhaps in that sense not a pure coincidence (I don't know, I'd have to think more on it) but nevertheless a most benign fact for our hoaxer when commissioning his crime.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostDo you have an expert opinion that they are not, by the way?
It's for you to support that statement. If you can't do it - and it seems like you can't - then there's no point in giving it any further consideration.
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