Harry:
"You accept that Kileen,being human,could make mistakes.That he did give opinion. My very argument,glad you agree."
To disagree would be a strange thing to do. Everybody is human and can make mistakes. Even Ben. That said, letīs not forget that I also pressed the point that the opinion Killeen gave was the informed opinion of a professional surgeon, and no opinion is going to be better qualified than that in the context we are speaking of.
So itīs not a question of "just another opinion", Harry. It is much more than that.
"As for reporters viewing the wounds and being in position to observe'holes' that too is a new one for me."
The reporter of the Star stated that the hole at the sternum was much the largest and deepest of them all. That means he either guessed or took a look. Strangely, his view is seemingly corroborated by Hewitt.
"Kileens opinion was that a knife would not pierce the sternum."
I think we need to rephrase that: Killeens opinion was that the exact knife that inflicted the smaller wounds would break if tried at the sternum. A "knife" as such may be half a meter long and extremely sturdy, and I donīt think Killeen would have believed that SUCH a weapon could not pierce the sternum. It was not "a" knife that could not achieve this, Harry, it was "the" knife.
It also belongs to the discussion that Killeen told the two weapons apart in more than this fashion. He also said that the weapon that caused the small holes did not correspond with the one that pierced the sternum.
"Killeen was not a weapons expert"
Killeen was PROBABLY not a weapons expert, no. But we donīt know that, do we? He may well have had an interest in knives, just as he may not have. Stating firmly that we know either way would be wrong. Consequently, just as I donīt have proof that he was, you have no proof that he was not.
Comparisons are often, just like you say, very useful. The snag is, though, that we can never tell if they are viable comparisons as long as we do not have the data we need to tell. Up til the time we do, just like I have said before, any comparison may or may not be a good one - and we shall never know, as it stands.
The best,
Fisherman
"You accept that Kileen,being human,could make mistakes.That he did give opinion. My very argument,glad you agree."
To disagree would be a strange thing to do. Everybody is human and can make mistakes. Even Ben. That said, letīs not forget that I also pressed the point that the opinion Killeen gave was the informed opinion of a professional surgeon, and no opinion is going to be better qualified than that in the context we are speaking of.
So itīs not a question of "just another opinion", Harry. It is much more than that.
"As for reporters viewing the wounds and being in position to observe'holes' that too is a new one for me."
The reporter of the Star stated that the hole at the sternum was much the largest and deepest of them all. That means he either guessed or took a look. Strangely, his view is seemingly corroborated by Hewitt.
"Kileens opinion was that a knife would not pierce the sternum."
I think we need to rephrase that: Killeens opinion was that the exact knife that inflicted the smaller wounds would break if tried at the sternum. A "knife" as such may be half a meter long and extremely sturdy, and I donīt think Killeen would have believed that SUCH a weapon could not pierce the sternum. It was not "a" knife that could not achieve this, Harry, it was "the" knife.
It also belongs to the discussion that Killeen told the two weapons apart in more than this fashion. He also said that the weapon that caused the small holes did not correspond with the one that pierced the sternum.
"Killeen was not a weapons expert"
Killeen was PROBABLY not a weapons expert, no. But we donīt know that, do we? He may well have had an interest in knives, just as he may not have. Stating firmly that we know either way would be wrong. Consequently, just as I donīt have proof that he was, you have no proof that he was not.
Comparisons are often, just like you say, very useful. The snag is, though, that we can never tell if they are viable comparisons as long as we do not have the data we need to tell. Up til the time we do, just like I have said before, any comparison may or may not be a good one - and we shall never know, as it stands.
The best,
Fisherman
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