Phelan wrote:Joseki is reading, because professionals have read it over and over for us?
I would classify joseki as knowledge, and would classify reading as what you do to see if the corner cases or deviations are better in this particular situation.
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You can pretty much play honte and shape moves all around using pattern recognition, or intuition(*starts counting down till Robert appears* :p), it just won't work unless you have perfect(or very good) pattern recognition/intuition.
That's kind of my point. As I said, perhaps I wasn't clear:
billywoods wrote:Reading is a tool to help you put your strategy into action. It is also the only tool.
What I meant by this was not that you can't memorise sequences or have good pattern recognition skills. What I meant was that you
must then follow this up with reading (is this joseki good in this situation, can this knight's move be profitably cut, do I want to take thickness or territory?), otherwise you are simply guessing, and have no guarantee that your strategy will come into action. Pattern recognition
itself doesn't help you put your strategy into action, precisely because it's kind of vague - it helps you decide which of the few hundred empty points on the board to read out. Pattern recognition itself is borne of and strengthened by your reading skills!
Having a strategy in mind is no good if you then follow it up with the
wrong shape or joseki - that's well known. As far as I'm concerned, if someone plonks a 3-3 behind my 4-4 stone, I don't choose a joseki at random; I think "do I want a wall? If so, in which direction? Or do I want to double hane and try to take the corner back? If I do that, and my opponent just cuts and connects, do I have the ladder? Do I want to finish in gote, or can I give up some points for sente? Is there a pincer stone that might make that cut annoying?". If you don't do this, you are not
reliably putting your strategy into action. If you do this, in an attempt to put your strategy into action, you are probably visualising what they look like on the board, which is a start (and I would say that was a kind of reading - you're reading out a local pattern in a global situation). But the only way to then
ensure your strategy will succeed is to check whether your opponent has any devious tricks up their sleeve to thwart your plan, or work out what happens if they play out of joseki, and this is definitely reading.