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  • Sleekviper wrote:
    Tom, you in the double kill theory also? Well cool, got a minute to read a thought?

    He He, Sleek, I just KNEW this would happen when I engaged Tom in a discussion of a possible double kill intent.
    Best regards,
    Maria

    Comment


    • I was having fun as well. Only Clack and Monty think Debs does all my research (she actually does only about 95% TOPS), and nobody thinks Don does my writing (though I do my best to rip off his style). If it gets to the point where anyone thinks I crib my ideas from Lynn I'll join the Ripperologist staff and just put myself out to pasture.

      Yours truly,

      Tom Wescott

      Comment


      • clarification

        Hello Maria and Tom. Maria is quite right that I am the first to admit that I did not originate the Schwartz theory. I have said that before. Nor, so far as I know, has Tom used any of my ideas. And to date, I presume that my only original idea is to put the finger on JI for Polly and Annie. (But it could turn out tomorrow that I come across a 1915 article by Professor Jack Robinson stating the same theory.)

        I am not trying to:

        1. Come up with a new theory.

        2. Get credit for an idea--mine or another's.

        3. Write a book. (I have a 395 p doctoral dissertation, and believe me, writing is a PAIN!)

        4. Write an essay. (I have 7 papers published in logic and ontology and those were also PAINS.)

        In sum, I am NOT a Ripperologist, make no such claim, have no such desire.

        But I do have a good many questions for which I seek genuine answers. Hence, my interest in "JTR."

        I would point out, however, that to call a theory stolen when adopted by others would be to make Jonathan Hainsworth and John Ruffles thieves as Sir MLM first originated the Druitt theory. Likewise Paul Begg and Jeff Leahy, since Kosminski (unnamed) may have been first championed by Sir Robert A.

        Of course, I know you are in jest and the sad old earth must borrow its mirth, etc. But perhaps, a new nomenclature?

        Cheers.
        LC

        Comment


        • Corey123 wrote:
          I have a question, did you come to this forum in hopes of studying the ripper, or the ripperologists? Just woundering.

          Possibly a fair inquest, and you might be interested to know that it has been asked in musicology too. (As it happens that I happen to know absolutely EVERYTHING about my 3 bosses, including how they'll react to every new idea, and which position they'll take in every discussion. Which doesn't mean to say that we agree about absolutely everything, even if we can finish each other's sentences.)
          And yes, I've been studying other Ripperologists, and very intently. Rob Clack comes to mind, Lynn Cates (although for Lynn I'd say that he's more of a great connoisseur of socialist history than of traditional Ripperology), and SPE. (OK, the latter I've been studying from afar...) There's nothing wrong to study someone's mind when they produce good scholarship and happen to still be alive. (And no, that wasn't a death threat...)
          Best regards,
          Maria

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
            I'm not aware of anyone other than myself who has offered anything new and viable regarding Berner Street in the last few years.
            So, did no one read Dave Yost's Elizabeth Stride and JtR: the Life and Death of the Reputed Third Victim (2008)? I thought that it offered more than enough new theories to keep us busy for a while.

            Comment


            • Hello Maria,

              I have replied in a PM.
              Washington Irving:

              "To a homeless man, who has no spot on this wide world which he can truly call his own, there is a momentary feeling of something like independence and territorial consequence, when, after a weary day's travel, he kicks off his boots, thrusts his feet into slippers, and stretches himself before an inn fire. Let the world without go as it may; let kingdoms rise and fall, so long as he has the wherewithal to pay his bills, he is, for the time being, the very monarch of all he surveys. The arm chair in his throne; the poker his sceptre, and the little parlour of some twelve feet square, his undisputed empire. "

              Stratford-on-Avon

              Comment


              • Hello Lynn,
                I deeply apologize about the nomenclature! ("Lynn Cates' stolen theory“!). The reason I kept using it is that to me it's SOOO completely hilarious because it SOOO totally contrasts your personality and ethics, which even the most dumb person on earth would recognize that they're irreproachable, Lynn. Still, I'll most definitely stop referring to this. It's not fair to you, plus it could even end up influencing the opinions of impressionable newbies.

                Lynn Cates wrote:
                And to date, I presume that my only original idea is to put the finger on JI for Polly and Annie.

                Oh Lynn, if I said that this idea originated by Scott Nelson, will you be terribly disappointed? Still, the Okhrana/detectives agencies part I find fascinating. I can't wait to research this.

                Tom Wescott wrote:
                Only Clack and Monty think Debs does all my research

                Actually...should I reveal here that just a few weeks ago, Rob was saying to me that you're one of the few Ripperologists who quote their (own) research accurately and “wholeheartedly“ in their articles?
                Best regards,
                Maria

                Comment


                • not to worry

                  Hello Maria. No need whatsoever to apologise. I recognise the humour (as I said--I also find it humourous); it's just that you and I are from a similar culture--academia--and there be those who sweat such issues. So, whilst I write papers on "Did Leibniz pass gas at the dinner table?" and you write papers on "Did Rossini pick his nose?" (heh-heh) we worry and bend over backwards about footnotes to avoid technical plagiarism.

                  And I'm always riding herd over my students to make sure there is not even a HINT of such.

                  So, it's just one of those things that attend our curious profession. (But again, I rather like the joke, at least at a personal level.)

                  Cheers.
                  LC

                  Comment


                  • The Grave Maurice wrote:
                    So, did no one read Dave Yost's Elizabeth Stride and JtR: the Life and Death of the Reputed Third Victim (2008)? I thought that it offered more than enough new theories to keep us busy for a while.

                    I recall your mentioning this book already once in July, Maurice. I've heard that Yost concentrated mostly on researching Stride's past in Sweden, and that he ommitted to research Michael Kidney at all. I think he concludes in considering Stride as a Ripper slaying, but I don't think that he offers any new interpretations worth considering pertaining to the witnesses' testimonies. I also doubt it that Yost concentrates at all in the IWEC, which is what interests me right now.
                    I also recall SPE not considering the book very worthwhile. I've looked it up on amazon, but it doesn't feature the possibility of reading through it. I'd be very interested in what you consider as new theories in this book?
                    Best regards,
                    Maria

                    Comment


                    • Stop typing for a while, dear, and read the book. Then we can talk about it.

                      Comment


                      • To Lynn Cates:
                        Thanks for not being pissed at me. And believe me, Lynn, I've noticed the similar approach from both of us to technical things due to the similar professional background. And understandably, one tiny thing that sometimes (rarely) has bothered me in Examiner articles is the lack of a footnote when technically required. (I seem to recall that R.J. Palmer's pieces don't feature that problem ever, while Tom's pieces did – maybe once or twice.)
                        And I'm pretty sure that you don't write papers on the subject of "Did Leibniz pass gas at the dinner table?", although I have to say that Butterworth's preoccupation with Marx's hemorroids definitely influenced my consideration of his book, which I have to admit I've only perused online, but I did find it a bit “light“.
                        Pertaining to “light“ research, there's a British specialist on Berlioz who's produced a 3 vols biography concentrating on Berlioz's personal life (NO mention whatsoever of the music), and I recall a particular spot where he keeps hypothesizing for 8 pages on why a certain British (uncoordinated?) dancer whom Berlioz was enamoured for 5' minutes in his youth fell of a carriage while stepping out and hurt her ankle. I seem to recall it was a real pain in the butt re-selling the 3 vols....
                        (But this is not a particular problem with Ripperology, where one can research the personal as well. One only needs to consider the important research that Neal Shelden has produced.)
                        Best regards,
                        Maria

                        Comment


                        • Butterworth

                          Hello Maria. Speaking of Butterworth, were you aware that he is officially a Casebook person? (Alex Butterworth.) Now, if only we could get him to talk about HIS research.

                          Cheers.
                          LC

                          Comment


                          • David Yost

                            The Grave Maurice wrote:
                            Stop typing for a while, dear, and read the book. Then we can talk about it.

                            Sorry, Grave Maurice, I just perused the book on GoogleBooks, including its index and lit references, and, despite of the book having been published only 2 years ago, I can see NOTHING whatsoever in there that's not already contained on casebook, as a transcribed document or in the forums discussions. Most of the arguments in Yost's discussion are quoted from the Michael DiGrazia Berner Street article in Ripper Notes and from SPE's The man who hunted JTR.
                            You could maintain that important new theories and ideas are contained in the (about 100) couple pages NOT included in GoogleBooks, but I'm sorry, not buying this.
                            The TRULY new information to come out pertaining to Berner Street will be coming out in the next 2 years, and it pertains to research currently conducted by Debra Arif and Lynn Cates (and myself, for whatever's worth). Obviously Tom Wescott's book is the one which will discuss Berner Street accurately as a monography.

                            Here's the link to the David Yost book (and apologies for the long link, including the word “false“ in the end):
                            http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=2qf6Tl8PEucC&pg=PA212&dq=Dave+Yost's+Eliz abeth+Stride+and+JtR:+the+Life+and+Death+of+the+Re puted+Third+Victim+(2008)&hl=de&ei=i90bTYWICYau8QO bzdGSBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved =0CCMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false
                            Best regards,
                            Maria

                            Comment


                            • Butterworth on casebook

                              Lynn Cates wrote:
                              Hello Maria. Speaking of Butterworth, were you aware that he is officially a Casebook person? (Alex Butterworth.) Now, if only we could get him to talk about HIS research.

                              Hello Lynn.
                              He joined casebook at the exact same time as me, posts: 0. Which makes me blush even more considerably about my excessive typing. Have you considered contacting him? PM is (obviously) not activated, but email is available.
                              Best regards,
                              Maria

                              Comment


                              • Hello Maria,

                                No one has the right to go dogging on a book that you are unwilling to read. You cannot glean the books details from the index. I am sorry, I have tried being nice, but this is going too far.

                                Also, Tom, as far as I know, has never writen a book. Dave Yost is a wounderful author, who wrote many books on Jack, one of which I have.

                                This is getting truly annoying. Thris thread is about Elizabeth Stride, and the BS man scene.

                                Can we please get back to the thread topic?
                                Washington Irving:

                                "To a homeless man, who has no spot on this wide world which he can truly call his own, there is a momentary feeling of something like independence and territorial consequence, when, after a weary day's travel, he kicks off his boots, thrusts his feet into slippers, and stretches himself before an inn fire. Let the world without go as it may; let kingdoms rise and fall, so long as he has the wherewithal to pay his bills, he is, for the time being, the very monarch of all he surveys. The arm chair in his throne; the poker his sceptre, and the little parlour of some twelve feet square, his undisputed empire. "

                                Stratford-on-Avon

                                Comment

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