Download The Sherlock Effect by Thomas W. Young (.PDF)

The Sherlock Effect: How Forensic Doctors and Investigators Disastrously Reason Like the Great Detective by Thomas W. Young
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Overview: Forensic science is in crisis and at a cross-roads. Movies and television dramas depict forensic heroes with high-tech tools and dazzling intellects who―inside an hour, notwithstanding commercials―piece together past-event puzzles from crime scenes and autopsies. Likewise, Sherlock Holmes―the iconic fictional detective, and the invention of forensic doctor Sir Arthur Conan Doyle―is held up as a paragon of forensic and scientific inspiration―does not “reason forward” as most people do, but “reasons backwards.” Put more plainly, rather than learning the train of events and seeing whether the resultant clues match those events, Holmes determines what happened in the past by looking at the clues. Impressive and infallible as this technique appears to be―it must be recognized that infallibility lies only in works of fiction. Reasoning backward does not work in real life: reality is far less tidy.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Health, Fitness & Medical

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