Originally posted by JeffHamm
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In the interests of allowing our dear readers some peace from all this, we may need to agree to disagree.
I would leave you and everyone else with a thought:
If two things (one of which is pretty jolly implausible indeed) happened on the same day after so long when they haven't happened previously - where there is a rather obvious common denominator (James Maybrick in the case) - does not surprise you because improbable events coinciding are just a natural and permanent part of life, is there anything at all which does surprise you, ever? I assume the answer is 'No'? Certainly, that seems to be what you are saying.
And yet, you would ask for evidence to support your hypothesis that causality played a role which seems strange to even suggest because you have already excluded causality by dint of chance just happening all of the time? Which implies that you would be surprised by some things, but perhaps not all things? In this case, you'd want evidence of floorboard dust on a document which - for all any of us knows - was protected in some kind of container or cloth from which you'd start to infer causality, but you wouldn't pursue the fact that 'Phonecall Guy lived in Liverpool (of all places to live!) or that Electrician Lad (I choose my initials carefully) drank in the same pub (of all places to drink!) as 'Phonecall Guy some eight miles away from Maybrick's house? So do we just pick and choose which bits of evidence we feel imply causality and ignore the others or is there some hard and fast measure of what justifies our dive into hypotheses?
Ike
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