Originally posted by Iconoclast
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"one's handwriting, of course, can fluctuate, but you and I both know that one's signature yields not."
Suddenly you wish to reject the signature I presented as inappropriate?
You all but admit that you dug through the known examples of Maybrick's signatures to find the one that vaguely looks like the scratches on the watch, even though it was from over 7 years earlier than the proposed date of the scratches, whereas the one I chose was made within months--early 1889. Either way, anyone can see the letters are formed differently.
Originally posted by Iconoclast
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I put to you that if we had 1,000 entries, you would immediately accept any of them as James Maybrick's signature, provided you were led to believe that it was.
After all, you accept the diary's handwriting as Maybrick's, even though it bears no resemblance.
It seems to me, my good fellow, that you are engaged in what the philosopher Karl Popper warned us against: pseudoscience and pseudo-logic, because you allow no system that can falsify your theories. The way you work it, any result is a good result that confirms your belief.
If the handwriting looks vaguely like Maybrick's, it is a 'eureka!' moment, suggestive of authenticity.
If the handwriting looks nothing like Mabyrick's, it is inconclusive and need not worry us---Maybrick was simply writing in his 'private hand.'
Heads you win, tails we lose, and either way you get the confirmation that you so desperately seek.
But seeing that we are told that Anne Graham is about to release an updated statement about the diary's origins (that is, if your information is correct), I see little point in carrying on with what has become a repetitive discussion. I'll wait and see what happens in mid-September.
Enjoy your summer.
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