The bathmat footprint analysis done by Yummi on PMF is a case study in ex-post rationalisation.
while arguments build by by supporters groupies are not....
The enhanced-contrast photographs of the print show clearly that the outline of the big toe does not extend width-wise beyond the extent of the narrower bloody mark. Yet it now gets conveniently widened in order to fit Sollecito's wider big toe. And there's a convenient failure to comment that Sollecito's arch area does not map to the bath mat print with any accuracy whatsoever.
I posted pictures for everybody to see. I made a comment on the line you mention, and I wish people to consider many aspects of the print altogether, as visual information and the right side of the brain allow us to do.
I could have commented, for example, that Sollecito almost doesn't put weight on his small toes, while Guede puts considerable body weight on them, and the bathmat print has no (or almost no) small toe marks. This is an analogy. I wonder why Guede's big toe has got so completely soaked and the fore part of the feet got evenly bloodied, while the small toes diden't.
I want people to consider the overall parts of the picture, like where Guede's second toe falls and where the bloody mark falls.
This is all ludicrous pseudoscience. Its use has been almost entirely discredited in the wider justice community. It's impossible to say whose print is on that mat with any certainty whatsoever.
PS Perhaps the reason the bathmat was still damp was that someone had stood on it with wet feet earlier that morning. After having a shower......
perhaps... or perhaps not.
But I'd like you to correct your statement on alleged pseudoscience, because this is offensive since not true. It is legitimate and intellectually correct to state that you thnk the research doesn't lead to a conclusion, but it is not fair and quite offensive to say it is pseudoscience. The term "pseudoscience" may only refer to something that
declares to be science or
pretends to be science. This is not my case, I'm not selling you science (and - while I take in account of any scientific argument available - I have never thought judicial cases must or can be solved by science). The purpose for which you use the term "pseudoscience" is derogatory, you use it as an argument to attack the very fact that the topic is raised and evalued, before chacking how inconclusive could be and independently from its conclusions.
This is a bit beyond in being dismissive, quite "too certain" as well from my point of view.
Anyone can make his own idea by looking at the pictures. New ways can be searched to fit the bathamt in Guede's print. Arguments can be listed. Everybody can make up their logical interpretations or search for more literature or research on experimental grounds, or decide what they think is more likely.