kirkmc wrote:Why would one want to have a win credited to them if they really knew they should have lost? That's the real question.
If you really think about our amatuer games, this statement is pretty absurd. Every moderatively competitive game is a game I should have lost at some point.
Treated objectively, with perfect knowledge, both sides of virtually all of our games reach several moments when, with proper play, the game is lost.
The game is not a game, unless the goal is to win. Yes we want to improve, perhaps more than winning an individual game, but without the pursuit of victory on the board, improvement cannot be achieved.
I say again, to win at go you have to do more than select the ingredients and follow a recipe - you have to actually eat the meal. And if you spend too much time squeezing josekis and dicing tesuji, the fellow who simply slapped together two slices of thickness smothered in aji may well have time to enjoy a feast while you rush, literally and figuratively, to choke the endgame down.