Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac
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I believe that I can follow your reasoning.
I think however that we should agree to disagree, and not make this one of the regrettable endless vendettas that sometimes occur on these pages! Please feel free to comment on my observations, however.
Yes, Chandler repeated Phillips' initial observation of "dead at least two hours". That is not disputed. I think that Phillips had second thoughts later.
I believe you want Phillips to be regarded as having meant something like, "she had definitely been dead for at least two hours, and probably longer, but in view of the coldness of the morning, and the excessive loss of blood, it might not have been much longer than two hours." You want the caveat to apply only to the "probably longer", leaving the "at least two hours" intact and unqueried. I am sure that if that was what he meant, then he would have said it. He didn't.
He is reported as saying that "He should say that the deceased had been dead at least two hours, and probably more, when he first saw her; but it was right to mention that it was a fairly cool morning, and the body would be more apt to cool rapidly from its having lost a great quantity of blood." That is two separate statements - an estimated time of death, and a caveat to it. It is not, and cannot be, a caveat to part of it.
My view, and the coroner's, is that he didn't say or imply as per your interpretation. He was a very experienced man, and capable of expressing his medical view with total clarity. He seems to have chosen his words carefully. He didn't say he was certain, but chose to say that he "should say .... but....". This appears to me to be a carefully selected choice of words. He seems to be saying "normally I would have said ... but ...". The caveat was added to his entire ToD, and in no way linked it to the "probably more". He said that his estimated ToD might be incorrect and therefore an unqualified over-estimate.
Please add your observations, but hopefully we can then let the matter rest - I, and I think most others here, dislike people repeating the same things endlessly.
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