Originally posted by caz
View Post
But I still have the same nagging question: how does the memory of Old Man Stewart enter the equation?
It doesn't, does it?
The way I look at it, Stewart could have remembered the watch dropping from a flying saucer. Who cares?
In reality, he had little or no memory of the transaction despite what Ero claimed, and Stewart retired in 1980, so there was no receipt.
We do know, however, that he owned a shop for many years and the detritus of this business ended up with his son-in-law.
Ron Murphy (who was not suffering from Alzheimer's) said HE got the watch from his father-in-law before 1990. It is his account (which was evidently made in a sworn statement) that matters. Before that, the history of the watch is blank and unknowable.
I suppose all this talk of faulty memories and believing people with faulty memories is a way to avoid admitting that Murphy is being accused of lying about where he got the watch, having supposedly bought it off a sketchy character with a nickname that sort of rhymes with Rat Betty in March 1992.
The game is obvious enough--exploit the Old Guy with Alzheimer's when it is actually his daughter's and son-in-law's memories that matter.
So, as far as the March 1992 provenance goes, this is what we have to work with:
Johnson bought the watch in July 1992, and, according to both Murphy and his wife, the watch had been in the family for years. That is, long before March 1992.
If Ero is going to lecture people about documentation, then he needs to provide documentation to show that Murphy is lying. It's his theory--not mine.
Yes, I'm happy to believe Murphy. He owned a shop. His father-in-law owned a shop. Johnson had a receipt to show where he bought the watch--from the shop.
Yet I am required to produce a non-existent receipt from an old man who retired in 1980 in order to disprove the theory that Ero can't prove?
Is that how it works?
If so, then yes: I've failed to disprove Ero's theory.
So, we have reached a happy conclusion.
Ero can dismiss me as a man who doesn't require documentation, which is a good thing for his theory, considering that he doesn't have any.
Cheers!
Comment