Tami wrote:* it`s your unconscious mind that sorts, relates and synthesises learned principles with logic, taste, experience, examples and thousands of other elements to produce a working "system".
Presumably the unconscious mind does such things. The conscious mind can do the same, but slower and as exact as necessary.
This is supported by cognitive psychological theory.
What does cognitive psychological theory say about a) the conscious mind doing such things,
b) how the conscious mind benefits from the unconscious mind's activity?
How else could anybody speak a language fluently
By applying vocabulary and grammar rules quickly:)
or play a musical instrument
I don't know.
or play a game as quickly as you do?
By applying knowledge quickly. The human mind can be very fast for things it knows very well.
* you must take each position as it comes
I prefer to create only positions that I want. In fast games (such as almost all online games), this is not always possible. Then I analyse the position.
these sources were not giving me the whole picture.
Vary your teachers, read more books.
Gradually, I`ve become able to read Japanese, and now I`m discovering a lot of principles and concepts that I was not previously aware of.
I am not convinced that one needs to learn Japanese for that. IIRC, the principles you have mentioned can be extracted from go diagrams.
try not to seem as though you resent famous 9-dan professionals for having the temerity to write their own books, particularly when you have only short, amateurishly translated excerpts to judge them by.
Haven't you noticed that I have given Ishida's book a chance to be possibly identified as more detailed than mine? It has been my intention to find out, but your description has not convinced me so far. The problem is NOT your translation, but is the missing clarification of the nature of the "principles" and the intended meaning of "flexible" as an example of a move characterisation. Is it a book teaching by examples and the reader has to decide whether potential principles are applicable in general - or is it a book teaching also by principles stated explicitly as such so that the reader does not need extra effort to generalise? If so, which of the 3-4 low and high approach principles are stated as being general?
The Garden of Go is big enough for everybody, and nobody is going to cut down your flowers simply because they happen to like somebody else`s.
You are misinterpreting my motivations for discussing Ishida's book:
- Which is its teaching style?
- Is it or how is it teaching principles?
- How detailed does it go into explaining theory?
- Are you correct that Japanese is required to understand the reasoning explained in the book?
- What is the quality of the contents (rather than the known playing strength and fame of the author)?
For myself, I am just curious. For others, I think that they would get a better ground for decision making whether they should buy his book.
I have another motivation: as an author of related books I am interested in verifying, comparing and possibly further developing the theory.
You are currently studying also josekis, it seems. So you like to emphasise examples related to josekis. In your review, you have done that. Now, I have tried to discuss the emphasised by you with the motivations above, and my related knowledge allows me to enter the topic deeply. If you had emphasised a different topic, which I also knew, then I would have discussed that and, if I could, would also have cited relevant literature, which then need not be my own. I think you have misinterpreted the coincidence, but I do not not discuss something just because I have written about it and can cite from my own work. I also do not omit relevant citations just to reduce the chance for misunderstandings of motivations. Likewise, I do not try to interpret your "grrrrr"; it could mean everything from being angry about yourself, about me or making a joke. Motivations are hard to guess, therefore it is better not to make too fast assumptions about them.