First, Bill, please stop calling me "dear" and "dearie". I'm not your grandmother and I'm not (thankfully) your wife.
Second....
Posted by Bill Hoyt
Misleading, really? But I put it right out here in front of you, told you exactly what , why and how. Now let us look deeper at your flawed analysis:
- How do you count "Ellen or Helen"? "E" or "H"? My, my, what to do?
Actually (not that it matters in terms of what
you're looking at) but in that instance I listed "Ellen or Helen" as a single guess and tallied that pattern separately. Since, as you say, they only become part of the denominator in terms of what you're looking at, what difference does it make?
(In reality, those who understand the "process" might count them as "L", since--as I've told you, JE works more with sounds than with letters. But...for what you're looking for...counting them as "E" or "L" makes no difference whatsoever--
as long as one is consistent)
- How do you count "C or K name?" "C" or "K". My, my, what to do?
Again, not hard Bill. I listed "C or K" separately and added them to the denominator. If we were counting more than "J's" I'd probably advocate more of a phonics-based system. But (especially with the absence of soft "g" names in the readings we have, for your purposes in tallying 'J's" this is another totally irrelevant question. Whether "C" or "K" it goes into the denominator).
- How do you past the "spice name" thing, where he rattles off "pepper" and "cinnamon", etc.? One guess, two, four? Which letter, dearie, which letter?
Well, since we're looking at how often he uses initials, I think that shouldn't even be included. That was clearly JE getting something from a
symbol not a letter or sound--which is the category you claim to be looking at. If
he had come up with the correct name, "Ginger", we could have counted it. But he didn't. The sitter did--from the spice symbolism, not from a name or intial. It stays out.)
- Now how about an "N" name, but softened with a vowel. Now what?
"N". How hard was that?

(Besides, again, you're only interested in two tallies: denominator (made up of all the letters) and numerator with "J's". So what if "N" is softened? Its still is part of the overall total in the denominator, Bill.
Finally, how do you get past his sometimes using one letter, but clearly saying there are two people behind it?
Two people behind it? What do you mean? LIke "It's 'J', like Jack or Jake...could it be your father or brother?"
Again, easy as pie. It would be one guess for the letter 'J', and then left up to the sitter to figure out who the name connects with (JE just makes suggestions. If he said, "I have two men, both with "J-O" names, then obviously that goes down as two 'J's').
There are multiple examples of JE doing exactly those things. All of them present problems for interpretation and counting. I corrected for these interpretation problems.
I don't think they're problems, and I disagree that your method corrected for them.
To remind you....my objection is to inflating your total by counting "There's an 'R' name here, like Robbie, Rob, Rich, Richie" as 5 separate "R" guesses instead of one. He's clearly saying someone (some
one) has a name that starts with an "R".
Its one guess, Bill. Not five.