Babybird asks:
"You haven't????
You haven't said that you and Leander concur that at this present time that "Toppy is Hutch"?
Whenever you change the exact wording of something, you also change the inherent meaning of it all. You need to ask yourself why I did not write: "Toppy is Hutch, and Leander agrees with that", but instead wrote "At present, Toppy is Hutch. That means that I concur with Leander".
If you did not read my comparison with a soccer game waiting to be decided, I would recommend that you do so now. "At present" equals "as things stand" and when you say "as things stand" you keep the door open for a change in that standing. That is what Leander did, and that is where we concurred.
There is a very big difference involved in saying that somebody has presently decided that Toppy is Hutch, and saying that as things stand, Toppy ought to be regarded as Hutch. The subsequent winners of a soccer game may well be commented on as losers "at present" when there is a second half left to play and it would be perfectly legitimate to say "At present, team X are the losers" using the exact same type of linguistic construction and the same verb that you point out, without having said anything about the final outcome of the game.
To further elucidate the matter, I am going to watch "the Midsomer Murders" on Swedish television tonight. What if inspector Barnaby says "At present, Mrs X is our killer"? Would that mean that he has decided that Mrs X is the killer, or does he mean that as things stands, he thinks she is the best bet?
I interpret Leander in a more "Toppy-endorsing" (as Ben likes to put it) fashion than you and a number of other posters do. And I do that because I believe that Leander has been positive to a probable match from the outset. I have never, though, confused what I see as a positive reaction on Leanders behalf with a decision on that same behalf of his that Toppy MUST have been Hutch. He believes that he probably was, so AT PRESENT he expects that the solution to the question of who was the Dorset Street witness is George William Topping Hutchinson - and that is how far I or anybody else can stretch any claims on behalf of Leander if we want to stay on the legitimate side of the prerogative we all have to "read" Leander. Nothing in his answers gives anybody the right to say that he has permanently decided on Toppy as the witness, and I think you will very clearly say that this is something I have pressed throughout all my posts. It has led to semantic disputes of a silly kind, like when I have been told that Leander never used the word "probable" about the match - something I fail to see that he needed to do after having told us that he would be surprised if it was NOT a match. Dividing apprehensions about the extent to which Leander believes in Toppy have also been abundant, but none of them have casted me as saying that Leander had made his mind up for good - just that he agreed that as things stand, Toppy is more credible than not to be the witness.
So if you want to post what I actually said, I am quite fine with that because I said exactly what I wanted to say. It is when you reserve the right to interpret it and do so in a faulty manner I have to protest. I wonīt do so eternally, though, since it would be a silly thing to do. I have shown exactly what I meant, and I have shown that it does in no way tally with what YOU claim it meant, and if you donīt want to hear what I am saying, there is precious little I can do about it.
The best,
Fisherman
"You haven't????
You haven't said that you and Leander concur that at this present time that "Toppy is Hutch"?
Whenever you change the exact wording of something, you also change the inherent meaning of it all. You need to ask yourself why I did not write: "Toppy is Hutch, and Leander agrees with that", but instead wrote "At present, Toppy is Hutch. That means that I concur with Leander".
If you did not read my comparison with a soccer game waiting to be decided, I would recommend that you do so now. "At present" equals "as things stand" and when you say "as things stand" you keep the door open for a change in that standing. That is what Leander did, and that is where we concurred.
There is a very big difference involved in saying that somebody has presently decided that Toppy is Hutch, and saying that as things stand, Toppy ought to be regarded as Hutch. The subsequent winners of a soccer game may well be commented on as losers "at present" when there is a second half left to play and it would be perfectly legitimate to say "At present, team X are the losers" using the exact same type of linguistic construction and the same verb that you point out, without having said anything about the final outcome of the game.
To further elucidate the matter, I am going to watch "the Midsomer Murders" on Swedish television tonight. What if inspector Barnaby says "At present, Mrs X is our killer"? Would that mean that he has decided that Mrs X is the killer, or does he mean that as things stands, he thinks she is the best bet?
I interpret Leander in a more "Toppy-endorsing" (as Ben likes to put it) fashion than you and a number of other posters do. And I do that because I believe that Leander has been positive to a probable match from the outset. I have never, though, confused what I see as a positive reaction on Leanders behalf with a decision on that same behalf of his that Toppy MUST have been Hutch. He believes that he probably was, so AT PRESENT he expects that the solution to the question of who was the Dorset Street witness is George William Topping Hutchinson - and that is how far I or anybody else can stretch any claims on behalf of Leander if we want to stay on the legitimate side of the prerogative we all have to "read" Leander. Nothing in his answers gives anybody the right to say that he has permanently decided on Toppy as the witness, and I think you will very clearly say that this is something I have pressed throughout all my posts. It has led to semantic disputes of a silly kind, like when I have been told that Leander never used the word "probable" about the match - something I fail to see that he needed to do after having told us that he would be surprised if it was NOT a match. Dividing apprehensions about the extent to which Leander believes in Toppy have also been abundant, but none of them have casted me as saying that Leander had made his mind up for good - just that he agreed that as things stand, Toppy is more credible than not to be the witness.
So if you want to post what I actually said, I am quite fine with that because I said exactly what I wanted to say. It is when you reserve the right to interpret it and do so in a faulty manner I have to protest. I wonīt do so eternally, though, since it would be a silly thing to do. I have shown exactly what I meant, and I have shown that it does in no way tally with what YOU claim it meant, and if you donīt want to hear what I am saying, there is precious little I can do about it.
The best,
Fisherman
Comment