[QUOTE=Henry Flower;385856]
The two Prater-sources (police investigation, inquest) can only be used for writing idiographic history. Not nomothetic history. The Prater-sources give the impressions of one single individual. Not the impressions of 50 people or more.
I apply the right method to the sources in this matter, since it is the only one possible by historical and sociological standards.
You are not a bird. Does this mean that you are not able to study birds and draw conclusion about birds? And how about studying dinosaurs?
No one says that Prater was a liar. There is no evidence for that. If there is any tendency in the source, it might be that she was afraid. What do I base this on? That she was barricading the door with two tables. If it is an historical fact that she was afraid when she heard "Oh, murder!" and did not want to go down the stairs to see if there was anything to be afraid of, she did not tell the court this. Why? Did she think she could have saved Kelly? All this, marked in blue, are pure speculations. But they are more reliable than the statement that such a cry was common and we know it was because Prater said it.
No, that is not the habit. The habit is to question everything I think and everything everybody else is thinking.
Regards, Pierre
Pierre, she had no possibility to give a reliable statement on this? That's garbage. Because she hadn't kept a detailed statistical diary of the exact times and dates when such cries were heard, and by how many other residents, you think you can state she had NO POSSIBILITY of reliably stating that it was a fairly common thing to hear? Rubbish. By those idiotic standards we are entitled to dismiss half the testimony given at any inquest. She was speaking for herself, from her own experience, she has no need to back up her testimony with a statistical analysis of 50 other residents. Do you apply that same standard to ALL witnesses at the inquests? No, you don't. Only when it suits you.
I apply the right method to the sources in this matter, since it is the only one possible by historical and sociological standards.
She lived in Spitalfields. In the autumn of 1888. You did not.
She stated it was not uncommon to hear such cries. You can call her a liar (if you have evidence to back it up with) but what you can't do is simply dismiss her claim because she is an individual human with ears, rather than a statistical analysis.
You have a habit of cherry-picking when to apply your self-lauded rigorous statistical/analytical standards.
Regards, Pierre
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