But is that not something that applies to ALL theories advanced here, Phil?
It does not apply to all threads, posts or discussions, because not all of us on Casebook promote "theories" - partial or all-encompassing.
Discussion of a contemporary or near contemporary suspect, or or sources such as the marginalia or the memorandum, do not require intellectual constructs. Using internal evidence from a document, questioning the document, is not the same as constructingan elaborate theory based on perhapess, maybes and the association of ideas which may or may not be related, speculation about motives etc etc. The scholarly apparatus questions the source. Digging deeper into the background can produced solid evidence. Any first year undergraduate reading history would tell you that. So when I used the word "some", I meant what I said.
Is there any theory at all that is based on "actual" evidence?
Well those advanced by the people involved in the case and at the time, have a standing that is different and more compelling than modern constructs. So Kosminski/Polish Jew; Druitt; Tumblety (as examples) are all good starting points in my view. THEIR orginators had access to more information than we have, could speak to witnesses, associates, family etc. They may not have been right, but they were there.
Are they not all - at best - based on circumstantial evidence?
No. Kosminski appears to have been watched. Material was collected as a result of the house-to house enquiries. All that produced evidence that could be double checked. Just as we do not know much about MM's sources re Druitt (pace Jonathan) we have to assume that they had sources. We cannot know now why Swanson and Anderson seem to have been so certain about Kosminski. But those theories are part of the record and thus on a different basis to modern ideas.
I am (very) aware that the idea that there must have been hard evidence relating to Kosminski one upon a time, but the truth of the matter is that having been a suspect does not necessarily mean this.
I'd dispute that. It is reasonable to assumje that men like Anderson, Swanson and MM were rational, logical and professional. It is quite possible as I have said, that they were mistaken, but they left their views and as historians we need to respect that though of course we can and should question what they say and delve into the context of writings, their timing, recipient etc etc. A novelist can do what she/he likes with the evidence, a scholar is more circumscribed. UNLESS we discover - as we have with MM and Ostrog - that the grounds for a view are apparently wrong. equally we can reasonably debate whether Kosminksi was correctly identified or was mixed up with someone else or others.
The mathematical equation is an easy one: the ones that WERE suspects back then, were all so based on faulty grounds with the possible exception of one man only (unless there were more than one killer).
We have only Caesar's record of his battle with the Nervii. We have no right to question that the battle took place, but we can ask questions of it - did caesar act as he says he did? Was he surprised and his account seeks to cover that up? Why was the account written? When? By Caesar or someone else?
We cannot ignore contemoporary suspects, we can interrogate the accounts we have and the reasoning so far as it exiosts now. But a suspect in NOT a theory, in my view. There is the world of difference between a man of the time, in a position to know, citing Tumblety; and theorists today fingering Lechmere/Cross or Sickert (as examples).
So if you are looking for - as you put it - "actual" evidence, then you will find yourself at a complete loss in every case. Lechmere comes closest;
Have it your way. But simply stating that as a fact is not persuasive or persuading.
I think basically what I am challenging is the outright assertion of certainty in these modern theories - whether van Gogh or Sickert or any other. Trevor promoted his German suspect for a long time with utter conviction, and now appears to have decided against it. What are we to make of that.
If these "theories" were put forward as tentative, as one among many, for discussion and debate, and with an open mind, then I have less difficulty. But the argument "this is the truth, I have found it" makes me run in the opposite direction. Sorry.
Jonathan - I clearly struck a nerve as the tone of your response shows.
I can hardly be said to be in a bunker, since I am not defending anything. I do genuinely have an open mind. I have questioned all my assumptions about JtR in recent years - not least whether one hand only was responsible.
But the fact is that I am NOT CONVINCED by the arguments you advance, am frankly bored by the repetition of your case, and question the whole basis of your theory. So no, I no longer read threads on those issues - but that is a question of prioorities and deliberate choice, not of a closed mind. Sorry to disappoint you.
Phil
It does not apply to all threads, posts or discussions, because not all of us on Casebook promote "theories" - partial or all-encompassing.
Discussion of a contemporary or near contemporary suspect, or or sources such as the marginalia or the memorandum, do not require intellectual constructs. Using internal evidence from a document, questioning the document, is not the same as constructingan elaborate theory based on perhapess, maybes and the association of ideas which may or may not be related, speculation about motives etc etc. The scholarly apparatus questions the source. Digging deeper into the background can produced solid evidence. Any first year undergraduate reading history would tell you that. So when I used the word "some", I meant what I said.
Is there any theory at all that is based on "actual" evidence?
Well those advanced by the people involved in the case and at the time, have a standing that is different and more compelling than modern constructs. So Kosminski/Polish Jew; Druitt; Tumblety (as examples) are all good starting points in my view. THEIR orginators had access to more information than we have, could speak to witnesses, associates, family etc. They may not have been right, but they were there.
Are they not all - at best - based on circumstantial evidence?
No. Kosminski appears to have been watched. Material was collected as a result of the house-to house enquiries. All that produced evidence that could be double checked. Just as we do not know much about MM's sources re Druitt (pace Jonathan) we have to assume that they had sources. We cannot know now why Swanson and Anderson seem to have been so certain about Kosminski. But those theories are part of the record and thus on a different basis to modern ideas.
I am (very) aware that the idea that there must have been hard evidence relating to Kosminski one upon a time, but the truth of the matter is that having been a suspect does not necessarily mean this.
I'd dispute that. It is reasonable to assumje that men like Anderson, Swanson and MM were rational, logical and professional. It is quite possible as I have said, that they were mistaken, but they left their views and as historians we need to respect that though of course we can and should question what they say and delve into the context of writings, their timing, recipient etc etc. A novelist can do what she/he likes with the evidence, a scholar is more circumscribed. UNLESS we discover - as we have with MM and Ostrog - that the grounds for a view are apparently wrong. equally we can reasonably debate whether Kosminksi was correctly identified or was mixed up with someone else or others.
The mathematical equation is an easy one: the ones that WERE suspects back then, were all so based on faulty grounds with the possible exception of one man only (unless there were more than one killer).
We have only Caesar's record of his battle with the Nervii. We have no right to question that the battle took place, but we can ask questions of it - did caesar act as he says he did? Was he surprised and his account seeks to cover that up? Why was the account written? When? By Caesar or someone else?
We cannot ignore contemoporary suspects, we can interrogate the accounts we have and the reasoning so far as it exiosts now. But a suspect in NOT a theory, in my view. There is the world of difference between a man of the time, in a position to know, citing Tumblety; and theorists today fingering Lechmere/Cross or Sickert (as examples).
So if you are looking for - as you put it - "actual" evidence, then you will find yourself at a complete loss in every case. Lechmere comes closest;
Have it your way. But simply stating that as a fact is not persuasive or persuading.
I think basically what I am challenging is the outright assertion of certainty in these modern theories - whether van Gogh or Sickert or any other. Trevor promoted his German suspect for a long time with utter conviction, and now appears to have decided against it. What are we to make of that.
If these "theories" were put forward as tentative, as one among many, for discussion and debate, and with an open mind, then I have less difficulty. But the argument "this is the truth, I have found it" makes me run in the opposite direction. Sorry.
Jonathan - I clearly struck a nerve as the tone of your response shows.
I can hardly be said to be in a bunker, since I am not defending anything. I do genuinely have an open mind. I have questioned all my assumptions about JtR in recent years - not least whether one hand only was responsible.
But the fact is that I am NOT CONVINCED by the arguments you advance, am frankly bored by the repetition of your case, and question the whole basis of your theory. So no, I no longer read threads on those issues - but that is a question of prioorities and deliberate choice, not of a closed mind. Sorry to disappoint you.
Phil
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