Archie wrote: ↑Mon Apr 07, 2025 12:34 pm
Note that Nessie failed to counter any of the points raised in the critiques I quoted.
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By “convergence of evidence” Shermer means a situation in which data from a variety of different fields all point to a specific factual conclusion.
Correct, also known as corroboration.
Shermer argues that there are eighteen kinds of data that converge on the fact of the Holocaust: five testimonies, four Nazi speeches, blueprints of the crematoria, photos of dead inmates, more testimonies, Zyklon B orders, Eichmann’s confession, postwar statements of the German government, and many missing Jews (p. 118). No, the list does not add up to eighteen, and no, we are not making fun of Shermer’s argument: this is exactly what he says, except that by the end of his litany the eighteen kinds of data have become eighteen proofs “all converging on one conclusion.”
I do not know exactly what Shemer said, but that reads like a childish micky taking, by someone who does not understand corroboration and convergence. Each testimony, speech, blueprint, photo etc is an individual piece of evidence. When multiple pieces of evidence all point towards one conclusion, that is corroborated proof. It is how history and criminal acts are reliably proven. Ironically, revisionists will resort to that form or evidencing and proof, for other historical events and crimes. They cannot when it comes to the Holocaust.
There are at least three things wrong with Shermer’s argument. The first problem is that if we accept the word “Holocaust” as a rubric to describe everything that happened to Jewish people in the Second World War we immediately run into a problem of relating the disparate parts to each other. For example, it is well known that thousands of dead persons were photographed by the Americans and the British in such camps as Bergen Belsen, Buchenwald, and Dachau: these photographs prove that there were many dead, Jews and others, in these camps when they were captured, nothing more. Sophisticated exponents of the Holocaust are in agreement with revisionists that such evidence has no bearing on what did or did not happen in alleged “extermination” camps such as Auschwitz or Treblinka.
The condition of the Jewish prisoners at Bergen-Belsen, compared to other prisoners, is evidence of motive and opportunity. It proves that the Nazis regarded the Jews as the lowest of the low, that they were hated and regarded as disposable. It proves that given the opportunity, the Nazis would inflict great cruelty on Jews and that they had been arresting them and using them as disposable slave labourers. Compare the Jews to Western Allied POWs and the difference was night and day. The Jewish prisoners looked like Allied POWs from the Japanese camp system.
That evidence of motive and opportunity converges with the evidence of even more horrific treatment of Jews arriving at TII or A-B.
The second problem is that the evidence does not necessarily converge on the stated conclusions. For example, when discussing the mass gassing claim, Shermer argues that we know mass gassings took place because of (1) testimonies, (2) blueprints of crematoria, (3) Zyklon B traces, (4) photographs, ground level and (5) aerial, and (6) existing ruins. But these categories of evidence provide distinctly different levels of evidentiary value. The testimonies, as is well known, are frequently implausible, were generated at a time when gassing stories had been widely disseminated, and were given before courts committed to upholding the gassing claim. The blueprints, on the other hand, only show that crematoria were planned. The existence of Zyklon B traces, in camps where the product was widely used for disinfection, is automatically moot. The ground level photos show piles of dead bodies. The aerial photos prove that crematoria were built. The ruins provide evidence that delousing stations, as well as crematoria, were built. None of the non-testimonial classes of evidence would necessarily lead to a conclusion that mass gassings took place, while the testimony itself remains unreliable.
That is a poor attempt at separating the evidence and it fails to show fault in the convergence Shermer, and historians argue. Witnesses who worked inside the Kremas report that mass transports arrived and a selection process took place. That is corroborated by photographic and documentary evidence. The people not needed for work were sent to the Kremas, which is also corroborated by photographic evidence. At the Kremas, they were ordered to undress in undressing rooms as they were to be showered, but the showers were gas chambers. The corpses were mass cremated and the property stolen taken for sorting and selling. That process is corroborated by documents recording the construction of heated undressing rooms, gas chambers with shower fittings, mass corpse cremation ovens and barracks for all the property, in a secretive "special" action involving infirm prisoners, Jews and Hungarians. The presence of Zyklon B in the ruins and vents found at Krema II, along with physical evidence such as parts of a gas mask and a shower head also recovered from Krema II, also corroborate. That the Nazis only destroyed the Kremas and two farm houses at Birkenau, leaving the rest of the camp intact, is evidence of an attempt cover up what had happened, from which criminal activity can be inferred.
Shermer’s “convergence of evidence” argument appears to be rather that, if various classes of evidence do not contradict the central assertion, these other classes of evidence corroborate, or converge, on that central conclusion. In the same way, an old woman in the seventeenth century could have been shown to have gamboled in a midnight glade with Satan — and then been burned at the stake, so long as a broom and a cat were produced.
That is a false analogy, as witchcraft is an impossibility, the Nazis building gas chambers is not.
The third problem with Shermer’s “convergence” model is that by returning again and again to rather weak categories of evidence — such as eyewitness stories, aerial photos, cans of Zyklon, the use of the word “Ausrottung” (extirpation) in public speeches — he passes over the enormous gap in the documentary record. It is precisely this documentary gap — the absence of any reliable documentation at any level that points to homicidal gassing, and the absence of documentation to indicate that the Third Reich was pursuing a policy of exterminating all Jews — that leads people to the revisionist perspective.
There is no documentary gap. They prove mass arrivals, selections, that those not selected to work then disappear from any further records and that gas chambers were built inside the Kremas.