Originally posted by Iconoclast
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Hi Ike
As discussed yesterday, I think debating this matter further would be futile.
Still, if you will hear me out, last night I came up with a simple exercise that I think will help you visualize the error of your thinking.
1. On 9 March 1992, a sketchy Scouser named Mike Barrett contacts a literary agent with what purports to be the Diary of James Maybrick. The last entry reads, “I place this now”… and gives a date of 6 May 1889.
Later, it is realized that on the same day that Barrett contacted his agent, Maybrick’s old bedroom floorboards were lifted—an astonishing coincidence, it seems.
As our resident statistician, you calculate the odds thus: Maybrick died on 11 May 1889 (the last date he could have stashed the diary) and Barrett came forward on 9 March 1992---which is 37, 558 days later, counting an extra day when “Leap Year” occurs.
Thus, we are told, it is 37, 558 to 1 that the two events would occur through mere ‘coincidence.’ A fact that should shake any Ripperologist out of his or her complacency!!
2. Now let’s make some small, irrelevant changes, for the sake of clarity. On 9 March 1992, Mike Barrett shows up at a literary agent’s office in Rome, Italy, with what purports to be the diary of the Emperor Caligula. The last entry states, “I place this now…”
Later, it is realized that on that same date that Mike came forward with Caligula’s scrolls, the Emperor's bedroom chambers were excavated for the first time on Palatine Hill, and the flagstones lifted. Caligula died on 24 January A.D. 41. The span between that date and 9 March 1992 is 712, 635 days.
Thus, according to your methods, it would be 712,635 to 1 that those two events would coincide thru mere coincidence! Nearly twenty times more unlikely than in the case of James Maybrick's diary!
3. Final example. On 9 March 1992, Mike Barrett shows up in New Haven, CT, with what purports to be the secret diary of the American actress Sandy Dennis. The last entry states, “I place this now…”
Later, it is discovered that on the same date that Mike came forward, the floorboards in Dennis’s old bedroom in New Haven were lifted for repairs. Only this time, Dennis died only seven days earlier, March 2, 1992. (I looked it up).
According to your methodology, the odds of these two events coinciding through mere chance is only 7 to 1.
Seriously, Ike. You can’t see the flaw in your thinking?!?
The circumstances of these three events are identical.
Barrett comes forward with a sketchy diary of a famous person that has not been authenticated, but has occurred on the same date that their floorboards were lifted. The odds of this happening by chance should be the same. Yet, using your flawed methods, the “odds” range from a tepid 7 to 1, all the way up to a staggering 712,635 to 1.
Clearly, there is something seriously, seriously amiss with your reasoning.
The simple fact is that there is nothing wrong with your ability to count and to do simple arithmetic. You are simply analyzing the wrong data.
You are also basing your calculations on the ASSUMPTION that the diaries are genuine, and that you know where they came from, neither of which are true.
If Caz came up with a theory that the diary was a hoax created by Stephen Knight, and stashed under Maybrick’s floorboards on the last day of Knight’s life (25 July 1985 ) you’d be calculating the odds of this having occurred randomly on 9 March 1992 at 2420 to 1.
Clearly, the THEORY has changing the odds! Run that one by your statistician friend and hope that his head doesn't explode.
In short, get a grip. It’s bonkers.
Now, take the time to go back and re-think Lord Orsam’s calculations and try to fathom why they are far more legitimate. And please keep in mind that the diary’s origins are NOT known. You cannot calculate the odds from a position of faith.
With all good wishes
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