Amanda Knox may not be a murderer but many people believe intuitively that she is holding back the whole truth.
Until she tells the truth, which seems to be something that doesn't do easily, well, her prison sentence will remain hefty.
Why doesn't the silly girl just come clean, especially if she is mostly innocent?
Here is why I don't support Amanda Knox:
If a reasonable person lives in a shared house and spends the night completely away from that house, watching a DVD, eating supper and then sleeping at another person's home, then returns well into the next day to discover a roommate dead...... that would be the truth and that would be the only truth.
You could interrogate that reasonable person for 50 hours, deprive them of sleep, but unless you were pulling out their toenails - which I'm certain Italian police are not in the habit of doing - they would be unlikely to find cause to suddenly announce that they were in the house and heard their roommate scream.
Up pops this mole again... and down comes the hammer.
Your personal, armchair-psychological guess about how people behave under interrogation (combined with sleep deprivation and quite possibly drugs) is both irrelevant and factually incorrect.
It's a known, scientific fact that under certain conditions, some people will start to believe whatever the police are telling them is true, and make statements to that effect even if those false statements put them in the frame for murder.
Whether or not you choose to believe this is completely irrelevant.
While I grant you that we don't know Rudy's exact mental state after the murder of Meredith that poses the same problem for your argumentation: How exactly do you know that he was neither completely out of his mind nor completely unfazed?
We know that because the evidence at the crime scene is not consistent either with a perfectly rational, informed, calculating killer doing a cover-up nor with a lunatic who is completely out of their mind.
And you may want to tone the "Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy" mantra down. It equally applies to the completely unfounded "physical assault and coerced confession" narrative you offered a short while back.
No. "I'm rubber you're glue" only works in the schoolyard, if then. I don't think you understand what the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy is, if you think that arguing that Amanda's false statement was a result of well-known psychological processes is an example of that fallacy.
The first two are not mutually exclusive. What do you have in mind for something else?
Sorry, were you going somewhere relevant? I don't see that point this question has.
Given that we don't know either way we are the nice impassé of all those things being possible. And there might as you suggested in just another of those situations a third option fitting neither of our interpretations. (Therefore your suggestion being a false dilemma.)
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No. It is not an impassé. If we don't know either way there is reasonable doubt, hence a properly functioning court cannot conclude that it didn't happen that way.
Also I have to point out that in addition to not understanding what the Texas Sharpshooter fallacy is, you don't understand what a dilemma is nor what a false dilemma is. If someone offers three or more options (such as my "or something else") then by definition it is not a
dilemma. If someone is not presenting two alternatives as exhausting all possibilities, which do not in fact do so, they are not presenting a false dilemma and since I was presenting three or more (you remember that "or something else"?) then I cannot even in theory have been suggesting a false dilemma.
I didn't make up a fact. That is actually just a judgment of mine on the hypothetical behaviour of Rudy in a scenario brought up by your side of the discussion.
So you still made it up, but it's even further removed from reality because it's your reinterpretation of someone else's hypothetical? Gotcha.
You are jumping to conclusions. I did not imply in any way that the DNA was deposited at the same time or on the day of the murder. I really just wondered how it ended up there and what kind of material it was. It was exactly what I stated: I was just curious about it.
Much like the luminol footprints, I suspect that we'll never know and that it will never be proven to be relevant. It's just a random bullet hole that the Texas Sharpshooter drew a target around.