The Name of the Great Detective.
Davies, Peter Ho
The name of the Great Detective remains, of necessity, an abiding
mystery.
This is not to imply that the Great Detective has a mild-mannered
alter-ego, as of a Bruce Wayne or a Clark Kent. The Great
Detective's unswerving commitment to truth and justice eschews such
disguises, since for the Great Detective to be anything other than the
Great Detective would be to fall into deceit, or duplicity, antithetical to his purpose. No masked man, he; rather an unmasker of men. It is
axiomatic, therefore, that the Great Detective never assume another
identity and, in consequence of such honesty, his name is held in utmost
secrecy.
Most understand this anonymity to be for the sake of security. If
the Great Detective's name were known he might be vulnerable to
attack, might become the subject of criminal activity, instead of its
uncoverer. He would in this regard be the cause of crimes, rather than
their solution, or even, unthinkably, their victim, requiring another
greater detective's investigation. Since the Great Detective is the
greatest detective (modesty, and a certain sensitivity to tradition,
deter him from taking this as his title, though it is said he did for a
time toy with 'Chief Inspector') this would, of course, be a
logical impossibility.
Anxious citizens, to be sure, have periodically voiced a concern
that the Great Detective's name being so shrouded, his very being
might be doubted, despite his manifest works and 100% clearance record.
It has even been whispered that the Great Detective is, in this respect,
failing in his civic duty. If his existence were proven, after all,
there would be no more crime, since whosoever knowing of the Great
Detective and believing in him would be foolish enough to commit
criminal acts? Sophists among us, the criminal masterminds especially,
have pursued this argument so far as to actually deny the existence of
the Great Detective. If the Great Detective truly wanted to stop crime,
they contend, he would surely reveal himself. Since he does not, he
cannot exist. Such reasoning is facile, however. If the Great Detective
were a great deterrent, there would be no crime and therefore no
criminals to detect: then and only then, in fact, would he cease to be.
Were he to prove his existence, as demanded, he would in essence be
simultaneously disproving it. By these lights, the Great
Detective's secrecy regarding his identity may be seen as one more
example of his piercing brilliance.
More recently, however, certain subversive elements have raised a
radical, new objection, accusing the Great Detective, himself, of being
above the law. After all, they point out, what if the Great Detective
decided to commit a crime--could he be caught? Indeed, these scurrilous
critics contend, he might already be responsible for countless unsolved
murders. The Great Detective, they assert, is thus both the world's
greatest detective and its greatest crime lord.
While this is clearly the latest self-interested attempt by the
lawless to undermine the authority of the Great Detective and, indeed,
of the entire criminal justice system, the charge must be refuted. To
this end, scholars at the Police Academy, in concert with the Great
Detective himself, have arrived at a definition of the perfect crime and
concluded that the Great Detective is incapable of performing it.
The perfect crime, according to their theoretical research, would
be an undetectable murder--murder being the most heinous of all crimes
(as well as a traditional and popular classic). The scenario for this
perfect or infallible murder runs as follows: Victim A is found; Suspect
B is sought. Victim A is male, discovered in a heavily trafficked
location, say a busy park in the center of town, with no identification:
a John Doe. There are, however, several clues about Suspect B. Shoe
prints are left at the scene. Wounds to the victim's body suggest
that the assailant is of a certain size, and right-handed. These clues,
however, lead only to the following conclusions. Suspect B is of average
height (determined from the angle of the blows), average weight
(determined by the depth of his shoe-prints) and average strength
(judging from the harm to the victim's body). Furthermore, he is,
as mentioned, right-handed like the majority of the population; male
(from the force of the blows) like the majority of murderers; and wears
the best-selling shoe size and style.
Already the alert reader will observe the nature of perfection in
the perfect murder. All deductive detective work, from the very first
demonstrations of the method by such luminaries as M. Auguste Dupin,
proceeds from the assumption that anyone, in theory (with the exception
of the detective who can rule himself out, unless he is a Bad Cop),
could have committed the crime. As clues are gathered, however, evidence
eliminates possible suspects, all the time focusing more and more
narrowly on a solitary individual, who must, logically, be the criminal.
What the thought experiment of the perfect crime envisages, however, is
that rather than narrowing the field, the evidence collected about
Suspect B ensures it remains as wide as possible.
Crime aficionados will note that while this is an intriguing
scenario, it should still be possible to detect the killer's
identity through his choice of victim. But here the theoretical case
constructed by the Great Detective and his colleagues takes a singularly
logical and devilish turn. It is further determined that Victim A is
also of average height and build, that his shoes and clothes are also of
the most common sizes and styles. The park he is found in is a regular
haunt of all our citizens, regardless of age, and social class. Victim
A, therefore, is to all known degrees also an average man.
Thus, the report concludes, the perfect crime would be the murder
of one statistically average citizen, by another statistically average
citizen. Hence the Great Detective--an individual entirely
exceptional--could not possibly have committed such a crime. It is
incidentally to be noted that such a killing need not be random. The
motive for such a murder on the part of Suspect B might well be to find
some means of distinguishing himself, of making himself less average.
The sole distinguishing and individual feature of this criminal,
therefore, would be that he was a criminal, but this one trait alone, of
course, would not be sufficient to detect him.
While these researches, and their subsequent approval by Internal
Affairs, have cleared the Great Detective of any possible, or even
hypothetical, wrongdoing, the conclusions of the report have had
additional unforeseen consequences that have failed to fully restore
public confidence. Sadly, and worryingly, as commentators have pointed
out, one corollary of the thought experiment is that while the Great
Detective could never commit this crime, neither could he solve it,
suggesting the sobering and disturbing possibility that crime is
ultimately a stronger force than detection. (Previously, popular opinion
had held that detection would always triumph over crime, and even more
sophisticated thinkers among us had considered crime and detection to be
in perfect balance, neither able to exist without the other).
In response to these concerns the Great Detective himself has, in
an unprecedented move, issued a statement through his attorneys to the
effect that even though the perfect murder of one actuarially ordinary
individual by another resists detection this need not be any cause for
alarm. As the Great Detective goes on to explain, the peculiar horror of
murder lies in the extinguishing of individuality. But if one thoroughly
average man kills another, what, in truth, is lost? Can such a killing
even be called murder? So theoretically perfect a crime, the Great
Detective continues, remains ultimately undetectable because it is
indefinable, insignificant, indeed, almost immaterial.
It remains to be seen whether this latest statement from One
Police Plaza will allay public concern ...