Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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But, your argument for dismissing the clock based times would also dismiss any statement about time at all, collapsing any argument or conclusion you've put forth on the basis of times. So your conclusion that the body must have been found at 12:55 is unsupportable because you have no times to work anything out. You can't say that something happened at X o'clock if you have no times to work with, and you're approach throws away all references to time, both of the clock and estimates of inter-activity durations. With no evidence to work with, you can make no statements (no, you don't then get to imagine anything you want, you aren't "free of constraints", you are "devoid of building material", when it comes to anything to do with time).
I'm not willing to do that, and so, until it is shown that the clock-stated times must be incorrect, I start with the notion that the Victorians could tell time, and had memories of having looked at those clocks. People on their way home, do want to know if they are running late or early, etc, and so Deimshutz checking the clock is perfectly normal behaviour that he might do on his journey back. The doctor testifies he noted the time by his watch upon his arrival at the scene, and states it was 1:10. Since his watch is not the same clock Deimshutz referenced, we might want to consider the possibility that the clocks were not entirely in sync with each other, but they wouldn't be out by much, and 2 minutes is probably a reasonable estimate, making the time window as narrow as 8 and as wide as 12 minutes between those events.
Testimonies about who arrived first, etc, can be looked at simply as an ordering, and the amount of time between the arrival of two people must always be considered as the amount of time between when person A arrives and when they noticed that person B was now there - unless of course they state they saw Person B arrive. But given the commotion, Person B could even have been there when Person A arrived, but was simply not noticed until later, and an incorrect assumption about who arrived first was made. While those errors are likely to be few, so one has to be careful how often one plays that card, it does mean that arrival times, and the duration between arrivals, are far more error prone. And given the stated times are estimates of time and based upon recollections of things they would not necessarily have take particular notice of, they should be treated as guestimates at best (what I meant there is that when someone arrives at a location, they don't start considering how long they've been there and take note of things like "oh, I think I've been here 5 minutes and now Joe has shown up, making his arrival 2 minutes after Mary appeared, etc".
There are a lot of statements made, some at the inquest, others to the press. Statements made to the press are far more highly suspect for all sorts of reasons (note, this is different from when the press reports statements made at the inquest when the press reports a transcript of the testimony; interviews with people are far more likely to contain overstatements by the person interviewed, and embellishments by the reporter when they write their article, hence the reports in the press need to be viewed with extreme prejudice).
- Jeff
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