Excellent thread!
Just wanted to remind you all of Legacy's webinars:  last week's was "Building a
Family through Circumstantial Evidence" ---she proved an individual's parents
without ever having a document that said they were his parents; next week's is
"What is a 'Reasonably Exhaustive Search'?" which might address that "negative
proof" concept (?); and later this month Geoff is doing "Digital Research
Guidance, Research Logs, and To Do  Lists: FamilySearch, Research Wiki, and
Legacy FamilyTree" which I hope will help me get more use out of Legacy's to-do
items.  Which reminds me, too, that Marian Pierre-Louis did a webinar last month
called "Plan Your Way to Success" that has helped me tremendously in stating my
goal, searching for the relevant documents, and (hopefully) drawing the best
conclusions.  She had excellent suggestions for forms to use to capture what
record sets have been searched, record citation details, etc. (that's what I
have trouble scrunching into to-do items).
Sorry to sound like an ad for Legacy...!

Also, in another related thread, posters talked about writing up your
conclusions in a formal report and attaching that to the individual or event or
source as a document/file that you can pull up when you need it.  I'm thinking
this would be appropriate when what you have to write is just too long for a
Notes field.
 --Paula in Texas
Researching:  Adair Baker Beasley Benson Betz Bigley Blagrave Burton Chapman
Clement Clough Coppernoll Costine Daulton Dinwiddie Doody Ellis Exline Field
Floran Floyd Gates Goodale Gordon Gump Hale Harbaugh Hind Hopkins Hughes Hurdle
Jones Klein Koyle Laswell McDonald Misner Passwaters Pelton Roberts Roche Ryburn
Sanford Short Singer Sullivan Weller Williams




________________________________
From: Alan Pereira <alanpere...@tiscali.co.uk>
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Sent: Wed, August 15, 2012 4:31:53 AM
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship


Brian,
I have resolved similar issues by finding the descendants of All 3 brothers.
You may find a namesake of your 6x GGfather with the other families thus
eliminating him from that line (negative proof again).  I take kb's view that
assigning a Bayesian probability may be a pragmatic approach to identifying the
value of the justification in making this assumption.  I am not sure that I want
to go into the math to provide a quantitive value or  that a later descendant
would have any hope of understanding it!

Alan

From:Brian Woolvett [mailto:woolv...@one-name.org]
Sent: 15 August 2012 02:23
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

I find this thread very interesting and informative, thanks to Kb and Ian for
their comments I am in a similar situation of my 6x Great Grandfather being the
probable son of 1 of 3 brothers, I will probably never be able to prove who the
father is but the idea of bypassing a generation with a probable is giving me a
way out.  Taking the argument a bit further how many of us can say without any
shadow of doubt that our father who is on our birth certificates is true!!


Thanks again

Brian Woolvett
South Australia
www.woolvett.com

From:Ian GARDENER [mailto:ijg3...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, 15 August 2012 8:55 AM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

Hi kb,

Thanks for the tip on Bayesian probability. I must confess that the math is way
beyond me these days (maybe alwaysJ) but the underlying broad principle is
definitely something I can run with for some of my research.

I agree that Legacy seems quite weak in the research log, notes department and
it something I hope is improved in version 8. In the meantime I just make my
notes in word then create a pdf file which I attach to legacy sourcing. I don’t
use native word format because the file structure is everchanging.

I like your idea of “demonstrating” rather than necessarily proving
relationships as I too am really laying groundwork for future family members I
hope. For that reason I also make & update hundreds of pdf reports as the raw
data may also become useless in the end.

Thanks again. You’ve given me a kick toward detailing my reasoning in more
detail.

Ian GARDENER
Australia
www.gardener.org.au



From:britton...@comcast.net [mailto:britton...@comcast.net]
Sent: Wednesday, 15 August 2012 4:37 AM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

Alan,

I also just document reasoning in research notes.  Legacy is excellent for
organising classical genealogy material, but it's limited or poor as a research
tool or record.  It has little support for anything less than fact, and that
bites not only subsequent descendants, but also the present genealogy
researcher.  I've sympathy for Ron's position regarding "negative proof", but
some term is needed.  On balance, I see the trade off, between violating prior
use in information theory versus important advantage to clarity in your usage,
as decidedly on your side.

I'm leaving history and genealogy of my line(s) to the future, but also
everything I can find which may be useful to subsequent or collateral
researchers.  Necessarily, that includes not just my logic behind judgements
made, but also conjecture, unconnected fact, and rejected "fact" with
reasoning.  Generally, I support the position taken in the genealogy with
detailed reasoning, followed by "Alternative possibilities" with discussion on
pros and cons in less detail.  Implicit in that is acceptance and warning that
my adopted position may be wrong, but a "Negative Proof" textual label is a much
stronger message that the adopted position is not only provisional but
recognised by the author as in significant doubt.  (Thanks Alan)

If we confine ourselves to "classical fact", we don't just constrain ourselves
to documents; we risk crippling our reasoning.  Scientific research proceeds
from hypothesis to proof, yea or nay.  Hypothesis is, by definition, provisional
and uncertain.  If we don't keep clear awareness of "nay", we too easily seek
only evidence to justify assumptions.  Legacy seems to have few formal places
for "provisional fact", and genealogies contributed to the web are typically
stripped of research and other cautionary notes.

I much recommend looking up "Bayesian" in Wikipedia.  Crudely estimating
probabilities and using them as in Bayesian Inference can be a help and a
powerful discipline in research guidance.  A quick check shows an average of 8
Dave XXXs alive in a parish at any time over 200 years.  Not good odds that any
record is of the one you want.  It's a caution and focuses work on factors which
improve probability.  Unlike other logical systems, Bayesian can be reversible
without circular reasoning.  In retrospect, the odds on truth for an initial
premise may be drastically higher when calculated in reverse from findings, and
a traditional "fact" may turn up, permitting the discovery process to be
discarded.  How, in Legacy, do we keep track and record?

Recently, I was contacted about a post I made in 2004, on a line I later
dropped.  My Legacy file had a few names and notes of interest to my contact,
but resort to paper files and old disks from long dead computers produced a gold
mine of lines of attack and disparate data for him, including emails from folks
now dead.  When I'm dead too, my Legacy file will still be on several computers,
but my other records will be gone.  Legacy needs a "research companion" with
cross referencing from the standard program, but is it impossible to somehow
formalise "negative proof" discussion within Legacy fields and facilities?

kb

________________________________

From: "Alan Pereira" <alanpere...@tiscali.co.uk>
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2012 4:35:40 AM
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

Thanks Charani & Ron
I think I will just use the research notes when I need to clarify proof.
Ron, I will adopt your probability approach when I have "negative proofs" as I
agree entirely with you on that.

Why I am doing this...
I am trying to look at my Family Tree as if a descendant 2+ generations later
picked up the tree and wondered why I chosen certain parents when there were
other candidates.  Also I am aware that variations on some lines in my tree
exist on the web that I do not agree with (especially in ancestry).  I want to
document exactly why I made my choice, which for the most part rely on positive
sources (baptismal and marriage records).  Where I have the 'Negative proof'
what I can do is prove it is Not the choice others have made in their trees.
 Taking on board Ron's comments this would increase the probability of my choice
but not prove it.

I gave up long ago in trying to correspond with people who showed these
erroneous links, as their response, if any, was to cite the other trees that
greed with them.

Alan

-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Ferguson [mailto:ronfergy....@tiscali.co.uk]
Sent: 13 August 2012 19:20
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship



3rd time lucky!!


Alan,

I can see where you are coming from, but I have not found the need to do
extensive work on this, with respect to pretty well all my family, who are
readily identifiable from the sources available. There is one exception (my
5 G G grandfather) where I have been unable to find a source which links him to
the person who I feel sure is his father. I have an extensive ToDo on him
detailing all the sources I have checked, and when, and I still regularly make
checks to see if anything has cropped up. The person I am sure is his father is
there because there is nobody else I can see who could be, and other evidence
indicates he is the most likely candidate anyhow.

However, I do not accept the concept of "negative proof". This is often a
concept used in ignorance by the media, often in the concept of a new medical
treatment, asking for proof that there are no adverse effects. This can *never*
be proven, only the probability range can be stated. Similarly one can never say
that negative proof can be used to define a relationship - only the likelihood.
In the case of my relative, it is possible, albeit unlikely given other
evidence, that his parents were just passing through the town at the time he was
born. DNA may resolve the question, but at the moment I have no contact who
would serve to confirm the relationship.

Ron Ferguson
http://www.fergys.co.uk/


-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Ferguson
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 6:13 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

Alan,

I sent this earlier, before Charani replied, actually I sent it from an email
address not registered at Legacy so it bounced! Anyhow, I decided to send it as
my reply is not quite the same.

Ron Ferguson
http://www.fergys.co.uk/

-----Original Message-----
From: Alan Pereira
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 2:28 PM
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Subject: [LegacyUG] Proof of relationship

I am starting a research task in the todo list in providing proof(s) of
relationship, which can be through a multitude of sources, the most difficult
being the negative proof.
My initial throughts were to create a document as a backup source detailing
these proofs.  Then again, why not just use the research notes.
Just wondering what others do...

Alan Pereira




Legacy User Group guidelines:
http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Etiquette.asp
Archived messages after Nov. 21 2009:
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/
Archived messages from old mail server - before Nov. 21 2009:
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyfamilytree.com/
Online technical support: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Help.asp
Follow Legacy on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/LegacyFamilyTree) and on our
blog (http://news.LegacyFamilyTree.com).
To unsubscribe: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/LegacyLists.asp



Legacy User Group guidelines:
http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Etiquette.asp
Archived messages after Nov. 21 2009:
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/
Archived messages from old mail server - before Nov. 21 2009:
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyfamilytree.com/
Online technical support: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/Help.asp
Follow Legacy on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/LegacyFamilyTree) and on our 
blog (http://news.LegacyFamilyTree.com).
To unsubscribe: http://www.LegacyFamilyTree.com/LegacyLists.asp

Reply via email to