SmoothOper wrote:lobotommy wrote:SmoothOper wrote:Has anyone else noticed that literature by native English writers tends to focus on the theory of strategy rather than the strategy itself, and seems to be more of list of translated definitions and descriptions of techniques rather than actual strategy. IE sente is, miai is, ko is... etc. Rather than with sente you can grab territory, make a moyo etc.
Well, it looks like the problem is your IGS 8kyu level. Bury all your strategy books you can't understand yet. Do a lot of tsumego, play a lot of games and after a year try to look again at this books you are refering to. Because all problems of beginners are their lack of understanding what they really need to train, and what should be left for the future.
Why are you reading about strategy if your reading, your joseki and l&d sucks? Strategy books are overrated by westerners.
If you don't understand why the books are written as they are - it means you should take more time before you try to read them. Do the basics first.
For me joseki, l&d, tesuji are only a way to execute a strategy, and I only need those joseki, l&d, and tesuji that are relevant to the particular strategy that I am exectuing. So 90% of tesuji, l&d, and joseki are irrelevant.
I think that we all need knowledge of the basics in order to choose reasonable strategies. If instead we are choosing strategies without reference to the position on the board and its various tactical relationships, i. e. tesuji, l&d, joseki, etc., we are playing blind.