Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
Sure. I don't understand why it is difficult for you to grasp that I am not attempting to fabricate a narrative for the courtroom.
Are you ready to agree that if we are going to discuss only the propriety (or "safety", as LJ would say) of the verdict then we must only offer evidence and argument as it was presented in the courtroom ... to the jury (or judges)? This applies to both guilt or innocence.
This is the second time you have asserted this nonsensical "rule", and the second time I've had to explain to you that it's rubbish.
As I've already explained to you, I am not particularly interested in whether AK and RS should have been convicted by the evidence presented in court as it was presented in court. I'm interested in whether AK and RS should have been convicted according to the best available knowledge of the affair that we have today. I've never been the least bit unclear about this.
You can insist until you are blue in the face that I have to do it your way, but it won't achieve anything.
The instant you bring up anything else then the topic becomes one of the likelihood of actual guilt or innocence, which is not the same thing.
You still insist on trying to have it both ways. Suggestions of possible guilt judged by some caricature of courtroom standards, but suggestions of innocence open to any hypotheses of what might be "possible".
This is also the second time that you've labelled the search for a proper trial result as "having it both ways". Please stop repeating this nonsense.
I realise it may be a lot more fun to make up your own personal theories and express your own personal opinion about every issue related to the case, and that it spoils a lot of the fun to discard all the theories and opinions that don't rise to the level of proof beyond reasonable doubt, but nobody is under any kind in obligation to facilitate you having that kind of fun with this murder case.
You mean people sometimes LIE on the internet? I had no idea. Thank you for bringing this to my attention. And again, thanks for the warm welcome, even though I might just be a dissembler partial to "non-mainstream theories".![]()
If you don't like the answer you are going to get, you have the option of not asking the question. Since you asked why I assumed you were an immigrant from PMF, I answered. (I didn't know at the time I made that remark that you had never posted on any topic here other than the Kercher murder, but that would also have informed my assumption had I known).
And who decides if this evidence has been "properly" collected and interpreted?
Yes, scientific studies which can only ever show that a null hypothesis has been disproved withn a margin of statistical significance. All you have are probabilities.
In the first instance peer-review decides whether evidence has been "properly" collected and interpreted, however people with relevant knowledge or expertise can also make this judgment.
As for the remark about "all you have are probabilities", that demonstrates a kind of epistemological confusion about why we do science in the first place. All we ever have in this life are probabilities, outside the realms of mathematics and formal logic. However rational people take the "mere probabilities" found by science to be much, much more powerful evidence than the mere opinions expressed by anonymous internet posters.
Maybe, but I think that is quite unlikely.
I am somewhat mystified why so many people either implicitly or explicitly maintain that taking a bathroom break while in the midst of committing a burglary is a routine occurrence.
Nobody ever said it was routine, so you are attacking a straw man with an argument from incredulity. We merely showed you evidence to prove that it's not terribly unusual, hence the fact that it happened is in no way a problem for the defence. People like Rudy leave their stools at a crime scene every now and then. It's weird but it's demonstrated fact that they do it.
This is a recurring theme in amateur attempts to "prove" AK and RS are guilty. People pick one mildly abnormal aspect of the evidence, and then exaggerate how unusual it is. ("Oh my, would a burglar ever not flush? I don't think so! Do you think you would call Meredith's phones in that order? No way! Could anyone ever use the bathroom slightly further away rather than the one slightly closer, if they didn't know the layout of the house well? The idea is obviously crazy!").
Then they stack these exaggerated claims together and say "They are obviously guilty... I mean, what are the odds that the burglar wouldn't flush and Amanda called the phones in that order and a burglar would use that bathroom? The inconsistencies in the defence story keep piling up!".
This is why Quadraginta got tired of me calling people out on the Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy, yet was conspicuously unable to find an instance of me calling people out on it when they were not doing so. The standard guilter approach is the Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy, with a healthy dollop of argument from incredulity added to each individual piece of evidence.
The first step in a rational approach to the problem is to throw out all the "evidence" which isn't actually relevant to their guilt or innocence of Meredith's murder, then throw out all the evidence that doesn't get past the level of proof beyond reasonable doubt. Then you see what's left - which gets you to things like the DNA evidence, the footprint evidence (such as it is), the bloodstains in the murder room and so on.

