Isn't the direct evidence the document itself in that case?"To make assertions at a minimum you must have direct evidence"
If stated as an absolute like this, I would disagree. It is indeed sometimes possible to prove things by implication or deduce something from other known facts.
Say a document surfaces related Abraham Lincoln or some other historical figure. Then suppose it is shown to be inauthentic (say by forensics or some anachronism in the text). Then we know that it's fake. We may or may not be able to figure out who forged it or how. But by implication we know that somebody must have forged it.
You're correct that witness testimony is a direct but unreliable kind of evidence. So if you're relying on witness testimony, it needs to be heavily corroborated.Witness testimony is a quite "direct" form of evidence. Witness says A. Therefore A. That's pretty direct, but not necessarily strong.
Propaganda is a numbers game. Suppose there were 30 witnesses to an ambiguous event, say steam coming out of a shower block. 10 might say that is "evidence" for steaming (steam is a gas, water vapour is not), 10 disagreed with the investigators and dragged out in the night by the NKVD, 10 say "I saw noffin". That is how the Soviet NKVD method of investigations worked back then. All evidence that might disconfirm the propaganda is erased with only the supporting evidence miraculously surviving. This is how it is with much of the evidence.borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 9:10 am I see the believers are using the 'consensus' method now. Lots of people say that they were holocausted and because that's lots more people than say they weren't then they must have been. Even Albert Einstein argued against it.
This reminds me of that one time where you asked for examples of gas chamber testimonies in the Western camps and we gave you quite a few names and then you said they didn't count because they weren't "mass" enough or something.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 6:06 am It's not about 'where did they go', it's about the idea of making claims without direct evidence.
Isn't the direct evidence the document itself in that case?"To make assertions at a minimum you must have direct evidence"
If stated as an absolute like this, I would disagree. It is indeed sometimes possible to prove things by implication or deduce something from other known facts.
Say a document surfaces related Abraham Lincoln or some other historical figure. Then suppose it is shown to be inauthentic (say by forensics or some anachronism in the text). Then we know that it's fake. We may or may not be able to figure out who forged it or how. But by implication we know that somebody must have forged it.
You're correct that witness testimony is a direct but unreliable kind of evidence. So if you're relying on witness testimony, it needs to be heavily corroborated.Witness testimony is a quite "direct" form of evidence. Witness says A. Therefore A. That's pretty direct, but not necessarily strong.
You're familiar with history I take it. If what you're saying is true, 'direct evidence' not that important, find me an accepted assertion in the modern era (say last 200 years) where a mass event (say something involving more than a hundred people) is believed to have happened on the basis of no direct evidence. I think this is fair for comparative purposes.
The mistake you are making here is pretty obvious. You are conflating "possibility" with "probability" or "this happened".Archie wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 2:45 pm You are asking for examples of things that are not documented but that we know about. That is kind of inherently difficult. But off the top of my head, the British ULTRA project at Bletchley Park was kept secret for about 30 years. That's a pretty major thing that probably a good number of people knew about. Yet they kept really tight lid on it.
There are tons of things that are true that can't be proved. Recently with genetics, lots of stuff has been proved (including mass events like migrations) that before were either speculative (based on things like archaeology and linguistics) or not known at all.
This is a defeasible statement; evidence can always surface to contradict such an observation. This is true of theoretically anything in history but is especially true for modern history. But the mere possibility that such evidence might be forthcoming is not enough to make any assertion made in the absence of evidence to support it 'historical'. One cannot write the history of something that has no direct historical sources.
No, Ortskommandantur Ostrow did not pass on a rumour, it is not stated to be a rumour but is the summary of an evidently official report through military reporting channels which landed in the war diary of the quartermaster officer for the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber im Generalgouvernement. This is an official document, an official source.
No, that's not the argument here and in the other thread.borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 9:10 am I see the believers are using the 'consensus' method now. Lots of people say that they were holocausted and because that's lots more people than say they weren't then they must have been.
It's not symmetric, imo.SanityCheck wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 6:47 am Archie, in syllogistic terms what is being objected to is the reverse claim in one of your syllogisms
The Jews were either holocausted or they were resettled
They were not holocausted
Therefore they were resettled
Well lets see what it actually says:SanityCheck wrote:No, Ortskommandantur Ostrow did not pass on a rumour, it is not stated to be a rumour but is the summary of an evidently official report through military reporting channels which landed in the war diary of the quartermaster officer for the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber im Generalgouvernement. This is an official document, an official source.
You're that confident it's an "official report" based on that? "X reports" does not necessarily mean "I have seen an official report from X". It just means that X reported something. It can be as unofficial as making a quip. This quip may or may not have happened and turned into a rumor. It could be an official report, I'll grant it's ambiguous. But your confident assertion seems unwarranted.OK Ostrow reports that the Jews in Treblinka are not adequately buried and as a result an unbearable smell of cadavers pollutes the air.
One problem here is the discussion especially from the 'revisionist' side keeps slipping to the Reinhard camps only, as in your post above which mentioned BST and did not mention Auschwitz, Chelmno, the other KZs, T4 or the mass shootings. The Reinhard camps appear to be the weak spot, one reason being because there aren't clear-cut documents referencing gassing as there are for Auschwitz and Chelmno, but they're bracketed by the other camps and the wider east with numerous mass shootings through to the Caucasus, and tied in to the rest of the history in various ways. Key sources and witnesses from Korherr to Hoess, Blobel, Eichmann and others tie in the Reinhard camps with the rest.Archie wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 6:34 pmIt's not symmetric, imo.SanityCheck wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 6:47 am Archie, in syllogistic terms what is being objected to is the reverse claim in one of your syllogisms
The Jews were either holocausted or they were resettled
They were not holocausted
Therefore they were resettled
Search Domain
There is the familiar adage "you can't prove a negative." This adage is incorrect, but the intuition behind it is not totally off base. It is true that open-ended propositions with a wide search domain are often very difficult to verify. In history, this actually comes up all the time. Say the earliest document referring to X is dated 1827. More precisely that is the earliest that I am aware of. To be safe, I would hedge by saying something like "the earliest known document" etc. Maybe someone else is already aware of an earlier example. Maybe an earlier example will be discovered. The point being is that it's hard to make an absolute statement "this is the earliest" or "there is no document X" because we are usually dealing with a wide search domain (all potentially relevant written records). If I can't check everything I can't conclusively rule out there being an example from prior to 1827.
On the other hand, it is easy to "prove a negative" if the search domain is narrow and well-defined.
"There isn't an elephant in my backyard." This is easy to prove because the domain is limited.
"There are no elephants in New Hampshire." Harder because the domain is much wider. You'd probably have to start calling some zoos. And could there be a privately owned elephant somewhere? If that is not legal, could someone have an illegal elephant? You can see how this gets difficult.
"There are no [insert some small, hyper-specific, non-native species] in Australia." Potentially very hard to disprove. Elephants are hard to hide and so you can make very reasonable assumptions to cut down the search domain. But if we're talking about a subspecies of rat or something, it becomes a lot harder to prove that there are in fact zero of them in Australia.
In the case of the Holocaust, I think the search domain is much more limited for the Holocaust than for resettlement (or more precisely survival). The extermination areas of TII, Belzec, and Sobibor are not very large. Only some tens of thousands of square meters. If the story is true, I say the proof would be right there in the ground, and it's not going anywhere. And I'm convinced it's not there (realizing of course that this is a hotly contested point). The German documents are a somewhat wide domain (it is for one person) but they are reasonably well searched by now (much more so on the pro-Holocaust side) and since the extermination program is BIG, we should find some proof without too much trouble. It's not quite "elephant in the backyard" but surely it's much closer to that than "rats in Australia." And I think "resettlement" is closer toward the latter. You all seem to view it the opposite way (like resettlement is an elephant in the backyard, but I totally disagree with that).
On the contrary, conventional historiography, especially German scholarship, *has* to address the selection bias issue when introductions survey source collections and observe what has and has not survived from the official/business type documentation, and the different collections of testimonies and personal accounts. This is a core part of conventional historical methodology. The Germans may be better at this than the Anglo-Americans whose books tend to have some of the wissenschaftlich parts lopped off, but the discussions are certainly there.Who Controls the Evidence?
"The evidence" doesn't exist in a vacuum. Especially with something like testimonies, most of the ones that are available exist because somebody collected them for a purpose. Understanding that context and selection bias is essential and this point is never addressed on your side. At all. The effort that went into the Nuremberg prosecution and other trials is huge and it dwarfs the cumulative efforts and resources of revisionists many times over. And since then I think it's fair to say that by the time a revisionist gets to see something, an army of Jewish scholars etc have probably picked it over several times. There has possibly been some suppression of documents. The Germans could have destroyed some documents and obviously would done so selectively. And the Allies might have had some incentive to suppress or at the very least not publicize inconvenient documents.
Those should really be ongoing research hypotheses. Really, any researcher should know the hunches and hypotheses and keep an eye out for how sources could fit in with them. Having read the 'revisionist' oeuvre in the mid-2000s after my PhD and having done a lot more research since then, I have certainly kept an eye out for anything that might support 'revisionist' claims, as much as seeing how conventional claims are reinforced by considering expanded ranges of sources.Hypotheses, Hunches, etc
It is common with a complex and wide-ranging topic to have some gaps. Both sides have some gaps, imo. Often the way research works is that you SUSPECT something, then you look, then you might either confirm or disconfirm it or it remains inclusive. Criminal investigations work like this as well. I would argue that it is not only okay to have hutches, this is ESSENTIAL. It's fine as long as you offer the appropriate caveats and don't overstate your case.
Conventional history doesn't make a 'no resettlement, therefore holocaust' argument. The overviews cover both Poland and the Soviet Union, the wider literature includes numerous studies of occupations of countries and regions. These add up to an implicit refutation of 'resettlement' claims because none of the occupation studies further east have uncovered any evidence for it. Historians can't include a discussion of something for which there are no sources, they do discuss the known transfers and labour deportations (eg the Warsaw-Bobruisk deportations in 1942, which bypassed Treblinka entirely)."Resettlement"
Like I mentioned, I don't like either/or set-ups. You are correct that there are implications of the revisionist thesis. And I suppose if the implications were totally absurd, then, sure, we would need to reassess some things. But in its simplest form the main implication (or alternative hypothesis) is that they survived (or a lot of them did). And I don't see that as an inherently crazy proposition.
Proving "no resettlement"
If you want to do the "no resettlement, therefore holocaust" argument (to be fair, this doesn't apply as much to you since you are not a johnny-one-note like some anti-revisionists), I would recommend trying to prove the negative. It's usually phrased as a demand for proof of resettlement from revisionists. If it were me, I would go further and try to argue that they could not have survived. That seems way, way harder than just looking at the killing sites, etc. And I don't think it would ever be conclusive (just as I don't think the Sanning style approach on the revisionist side can ever be conclusive). But if someone wants to present that case thoroughly, I would take it seriously.
Having read more war diaries than most, this is a classic formulation - a report came in from a subordinate unit, the route is unspecified, whether a written letter or phone call is not stated. It was through *channels* and that applies whether a written communication was involved or a phone call, and once recorded in a war diary or activity report, becomes an official report, as opposed to an unofficial diary, field post letter or chit-chat with a wife back in Germany.fireofice wrote: ↑Thu Oct 17, 2024 7:08 pmWell lets see what it actually says:SanityCheck wrote:No, Ortskommandantur Ostrow did not pass on a rumour, it is not stated to be a rumour but is the summary of an evidently official report through military reporting channels which landed in the war diary of the quartermaster officer for the Wehrmachtbefehlshaber im Generalgouvernement. This is an official document, an official source.
You're that confident it's an "official report" based on that? "X reports" does not necessarily mean "I have seen an official report from X". It just means that X reported something. It can be as unofficial as making a quip. This quip may or may not have happened and turned into a rumor. It could be an official report, I'll grant it's ambiguous. But your confident assertion seems unwarranted.OK Ostrow reports that the Jews in Treblinka are not adequately buried and as a result an unbearable smell of cadavers pollutes the air.
I can assure you these are not "copes". Your explanation that stench could have been smelled from the camp itself was sufficient for me to dismiss this as not proving anything. This was just one more thing that didn't convince me, but I'll take your word for it that every time someone refers to a "report" in these diaries that it necessarily refers to an official report.SanityCheck wrote:The coulda-woulda-shouldas and maybes you offer are just copes.