May I step in here?
As I was curious to know what Japanese people thought about Japanese terms, I thought I would ask a Japanese. Perhaps Mr Ito is not especially strong - maybe 4d or 5d by Hiroshima standards (which are quite severe by Japanese standards, or so I hear), but he is not weak and can speak English too, so it was possible for me to double-check what he was saying.
RobertJasiek wrote:E.g., in the simpler model, a wall with two eyes can be useless if it cannot make any territory. A wall with two eyes but, after an opposing move, less than two eyes is not, as the simpler model claims, top grade thickness. A wall without weaknesses and not 100% alive need not be "medium-grade thickness" but can be just an attacked burden. Etc. The simpler model causes trouble without end. To defend it, you need to invest as much effort as you would need to invest in my proper model.
First, we`re not necessarily talking about walls.
Second, if a wall has two eyes, it has two eyes. If eyeshape can still be taken away, then obviously it does not have two eyes yet, but would have a defect instead, which would make the wall low-grade thickness, if it were thick at all.
Third, I don`t mind Robert sharing his ideas, but I would like to ask him to be more tolerant and respectful of others` opinions. His theory is not necessarily the "proper model", although it may - or may not - have merit.
Tami wrote:厚み (atsumi) - thickness - according to Mr Ito, atsumi means the strong area (near a wall, etc.)
厚さ (atsusa) - thickness - this means strong stones themselves, and it comes in several grades - a wall with two eyes in top grade thickness; if the wall has no weaknesses, but is not yet 100% alive, it is medium-grade thickness; if the wall has a defect, it is low-grade thickness.
I admit my own English was a little bit careless here. I meant to use "wall" as an example of something that is usually thick, but not as a synonym for "thickness". Perhaps if I rewrite it like this there will be less chance of misunderstanding:
厚み (atsumi) - thickness - according to Mr Ito, atsumi means a strong area (the area near a thick group)
厚さ (atsusa) - thickness - this means strong stones themselves, and it can be graded - a powerful, living group (for an example, a wall with two complete eyes) is top-grade thickness; a powerful group with no weakness (for example, a ponnuki), but which might yet die, is medium-grade thickness; a powerful group with a defect is low-grade thickness.
Speaking personally, I think this is a useful foundation to build on. There are all kinds of other considerations to take into account, such a nerai (aims), aji, influence and potential territory, but for a starting point it is simple, reasonable and easy to use.