Charlie Wilkes
Illuminator
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2009
- Messages
- 4,177
Well I think this is the heart of one of the big differences between most of the people here and Mach and Italians.
The idea that good science is really good circumstantial evidence and weak science is probable evidence is ridiculous. Really sad that one person would believe that but tragic if it is the judicial system of a country.
Whereas circumstantial evidence is the best evidence when done right this isn't circumstantial at all. It's just crap.
I rarely comment on the culture of Italy or the US regarding this case but if Mach is expressing how it really is in Italy, well...sad very sad that a society could have sunk to this level, truly backwards thinking.
His thinking is not unique to Italy. It is the working method of crackpots everywhere.
The reasoning, as it applies to this case, goes something like this:
It doesn't matter if the knife really was the murder weapon. If one can show that it might have been the murder weapon, that is enough to give it a certain weight as evidence. It can then be added to other evidence that might be incriminating, like luminol footprints and mixed DNA, to the point where the cumulative weight is deemed sufficient.
This, of course, is a perfect blueprint for how to convict someone who is in fact innocent.
It is why a skeptical investigator tests each piece of evidence by asking whether it fits into a narrative that explains what happened. Cult believers avoid this exercise, because it tends to demolish the artifacts that prop up their belief. It doesn't matter whether the subject is Meredith Kercher or JFK or 9-11. Cult believers do not have a detailed theory that holds up to scrutiny. They have a hundred reasons why the obvious theory is wrong and something else must have happened.