[Ben:
"I say, Fisherman, I’m really in the mood going round in relentless repetitive circles on the subject of Hutchinson.
Care to join me?"
Already have!
"Why would either of them have a problem with my observation that Bob Hinton probably spoke to more than two policemen? Are you sure you’re not trying to encourage yet more people to pick a fight with me?"
I was more hinting at YOUR hinting at the twine being Ripperologists, thus making that a potential reason for their stance.
"You just have to use your imagination and come up with a realistic picture"
I do just that. Thing is, your imagination and mine seemingly differ. A lot
"I don’t know why you’re finding my observation so difficult to compute. The extent to which PC Smith noticed the man was evidently sufficient for him to have recorded the non-outlandish extent of detail he divulged at the inquest, which wasn’t much by any means, but not unimpressive considering the brief nature of the sighting. Had Smith been scrutinising the man specifically, there was still only so much he could notice and then commit to memory, i.e. nowhere near as much as discredited Hutchinson implausibly claimed."
If you are correct, it would all hinge on the sparsity of the man´s attire. Otherwise, I find it hard to defend a line where a casual observation would yeld nearly as much as an intense ditto would. Such a suggestion is completely unviable, if that is your meaning.
And everybody knows that, so perhaps I am misreading you.
"Hutchinson only SAID he was interested, Fisherman."
Not "only", Ben. Such a thing would imply that he lied. Hutchinson said that the man was interested, and that may be true or untrue.
Besides, it was NOT the "only" thing he did. He also added that he stooped down to see the man better, and that he followed him intently all over the place. Taken together, it points not AWAY from an interest, but TOWARDS such a thing.
"What if he simply lied about this in the hope that the extent of detail would appear less ridiculous and outlandish?
Then he would have been a fool, Abberline would have been gullible and I would be wrong. None of the suggestions work for me.
"Clearly the lie didn’t work, as the “interest” factor doesn’t prevent the description being outlandish and ridiculous."
I ascribe to the exact same view here as Stewart Evans.
"I see you revert back to this “well lit” business. This description applied to Dorset Street only, and there was no opportunity to register horseshoe silly tie-pins and silly dark eyelashes as he followed the couple from a distance."
... which is why we should work from the assumption that he noticed the facial features when he took a look at them, and realize that he may have taken in the horse-shoe pin, positioned a few inches away from the face at the same stage. If this was not when it happened, then we must accept that it happened at some other stage of his following the man and observing him. How hard can it be?
"Hutchinson only SAID the man had elaborate clothing."
Not "only", Ben. Such a thing would imply that he lied. Hutchinson said that the man had elaborate clothing - and that may be true or untrue.
"What if he simply lied about it to vindicate his interest in the man’s appearance?"
Then he would have been a fool, Abberline would have been gullible and I would be wrong. None of the suggestions work for me.
"What if he lied about it because he wanted to deflect suspicion in a false direction, and realised that the stereotypical bogeyman would be ideally suited to that purpose?"
Same answer.
"Backing up Hutchinson’s claims with Hutchinson’s claims is very circular reasoning."
Backing up a conjured-up wish that he was the killer with all the things he did NEVER say remains a lot worse, I´m afraid. And normally, when people testify and are believed, it is not called "circular reasoning", Ben. If we are to go down that alley, then why did you try to paint me out as heartless for not believing in Lewis second version of the truth, differing totally from the first? Would that not make your totally uncritical belief in her story "circular reasoning"?
The best,
Fisherman
"I say, Fisherman, I’m really in the mood going round in relentless repetitive circles on the subject of Hutchinson.
Care to join me?"
Already have!
"Why would either of them have a problem with my observation that Bob Hinton probably spoke to more than two policemen? Are you sure you’re not trying to encourage yet more people to pick a fight with me?"
I was more hinting at YOUR hinting at the twine being Ripperologists, thus making that a potential reason for their stance.
"You just have to use your imagination and come up with a realistic picture"
I do just that. Thing is, your imagination and mine seemingly differ. A lot
"I don’t know why you’re finding my observation so difficult to compute. The extent to which PC Smith noticed the man was evidently sufficient for him to have recorded the non-outlandish extent of detail he divulged at the inquest, which wasn’t much by any means, but not unimpressive considering the brief nature of the sighting. Had Smith been scrutinising the man specifically, there was still only so much he could notice and then commit to memory, i.e. nowhere near as much as discredited Hutchinson implausibly claimed."
If you are correct, it would all hinge on the sparsity of the man´s attire. Otherwise, I find it hard to defend a line where a casual observation would yeld nearly as much as an intense ditto would. Such a suggestion is completely unviable, if that is your meaning.
And everybody knows that, so perhaps I am misreading you.
"Hutchinson only SAID he was interested, Fisherman."
Not "only", Ben. Such a thing would imply that he lied. Hutchinson said that the man was interested, and that may be true or untrue.
Besides, it was NOT the "only" thing he did. He also added that he stooped down to see the man better, and that he followed him intently all over the place. Taken together, it points not AWAY from an interest, but TOWARDS such a thing.
"What if he simply lied about this in the hope that the extent of detail would appear less ridiculous and outlandish?
Then he would have been a fool, Abberline would have been gullible and I would be wrong. None of the suggestions work for me.
"Clearly the lie didn’t work, as the “interest” factor doesn’t prevent the description being outlandish and ridiculous."
I ascribe to the exact same view here as Stewart Evans.
"I see you revert back to this “well lit” business. This description applied to Dorset Street only, and there was no opportunity to register horseshoe silly tie-pins and silly dark eyelashes as he followed the couple from a distance."
... which is why we should work from the assumption that he noticed the facial features when he took a look at them, and realize that he may have taken in the horse-shoe pin, positioned a few inches away from the face at the same stage. If this was not when it happened, then we must accept that it happened at some other stage of his following the man and observing him. How hard can it be?
"Hutchinson only SAID the man had elaborate clothing."
Not "only", Ben. Such a thing would imply that he lied. Hutchinson said that the man had elaborate clothing - and that may be true or untrue.
"What if he simply lied about it to vindicate his interest in the man’s appearance?"
Then he would have been a fool, Abberline would have been gullible and I would be wrong. None of the suggestions work for me.
"What if he lied about it because he wanted to deflect suspicion in a false direction, and realised that the stereotypical bogeyman would be ideally suited to that purpose?"
Same answer.
"Backing up Hutchinson’s claims with Hutchinson’s claims is very circular reasoning."
Backing up a conjured-up wish that he was the killer with all the things he did NEVER say remains a lot worse, I´m afraid. And normally, when people testify and are believed, it is not called "circular reasoning", Ben. If we are to go down that alley, then why did you try to paint me out as heartless for not believing in Lewis second version of the truth, differing totally from the first? Would that not make your totally uncritical belief in her story "circular reasoning"?
The best,
Fisherman
Comment