Here's a thought exercise it might be instructive to engage in, even if you accept (as I do) that all or most of the canonicals, and even some of the noncanonicals, were killed by the same hand.
What, in your view, is the fewest number of related murders in the Whitechapel set you think the evidence can be made to support? In other words, I'm challenging you all to separate out as many of the murders from each other as possible by positing as many different killers as you think plausible without overly stretching credulity.
Can a reasonable case be made that all five canonical victims, in addition to every single one of the noncanonicals, were killed by different hands? If not, what is the minimum possible number of murders one has to group together? Is it easier to make a case that none of the murders were by the same perpetrator/s or that they all were?
What, in your view, is the fewest number of related murders in the Whitechapel set you think the evidence can be made to support? In other words, I'm challenging you all to separate out as many of the murders from each other as possible by positing as many different killers as you think plausible without overly stretching credulity.
Can a reasonable case be made that all five canonical victims, in addition to every single one of the noncanonicals, were killed by different hands? If not, what is the minimum possible number of murders one has to group together? Is it easier to make a case that none of the murders were by the same perpetrator/s or that they all were?
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