Originally posted by Iconoclast
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All Lord Orsam was calculating is how likely it would have been for an electrician to have been working at Dodd’s house on any given workday in 1992 (workdays being the only days Mike could have called Crew Literary Agency). That’s it. You may not have liked his exercise, but that’s what he was calculating. As such, of course he had to count all the known days electricians had worked for Dodd that year--before during and after. That’s how probabilities work. Hell, it could have been a lot worse. If we were to learn that Dodd had more electricians working the following November/December, long after the diary had been found, they would have been counted, too. And, come to think of it, Orsam could have counted all days that ANY type of workman was on Dodd’s property, just as long as he admitted that that is what he was doing, since the diary doesn’t say anything specifically about hiding the diary in a place that only an electrician would look.
It is at this juncture that you scream: BUT THE FLOORBOARDS.
You simply don’t get it, mate. The floorboards don’t matter. The floorboards aren’t a proven provenance; they are only a suspicion. So what you are really measuring is suspicions. Keith’s suspicions, to be specific. If you had actual evidence that the diary was found under the floorboards, you wouldn’t be bothering with impressing us with probabilities, would you?
Remember what you are attempting to accomplish. I encourage you to get with a statistician so he can point out the error of your thinking. I haven't the patience.
At least do this much. Meditate on the following:
Please try to comprehend how the vague wording of the diary makes a mockery of your experiments in probability theory. (Not to mention the lack of evidence that Eddie found anything).
If diary said "I will place this diary now under my bedroom floorboards" that would give us an iron-clad reference for our calculations.
But, in fact, the diary states "'I place this now in a place where it shall be found.”
Not only does it not say Jack Shite about floorboards, it does not even state the diary was going to be hidden. It states the opposite. Nor do we know if the diary WAS found…instead of being created. The probabilities you are attempting to measure are based on ghosts.
So--IKE--what exactly ARE you trying to measure?
[HINT: DO NOT SAY FLOORBOARDS!!!!]
At the risk of repeating myself, until you have actual evidence, what you are really attempting to measure is the validity of Keith Skinner’s suspicions. Or put another way, you are trying to calculate how likely it would have been for a ‘Maybrickian’ event significant enough to have caught Keith’s attention to have occurred on the same day that Barrett came forward with the diary. (Caveat: we don’t actually know March 9th is the day Barrett first came forward with the diary, but I concede it must have been in the ballpark).
Since you don’t actually have evidence that the diary came under floorboards, you can’t use that as the sole point of reference—it’s just one suspicion among many potential suspicions that are as yet unconfirmed.
What events would qualify?
Work on Dodd’s basement? Renovations at one of Michael Maybrick’s houses? Tearing out a shelf at the chambers of one of Maybrick’s former lawyer’s law offices? The excavation of John Over’s outhouse? An estate sale held at house in Aigburth?
“No,” I hear you scream, “nothing was found at those places.”
And I reply: “and you don’t know that anything was found under Dodd’s floorboards either!!”
Ask yourself this, Ike: what EXACTLY are you attempting to measure? And how do you plan on using statistics to measure it? The question is more subtle than you seem to grasp, because the diary doesn’t really leave us a reference point to use in our calculations. And we don’t have an actual proven event, either.
All you can really say is “man, it’s weird that some work was done on Dodd’s house the same day that Mike called Doreen.”
And I would ask, “how often does Dodd have work done on his house? Was something actually found, or did constant questioning by those investigating Dodd’s recent work inadvertently create the belief that something had been found?”
Stay away from statistics, Ike. You don’t have the aptitude, and there is nothing more annoying than being rudely lectured by someone who doesn't have a firm grasp of the subject matter.
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