Bill Spight wrote:Well, it's OK if you can't figure out why the pro made a play.
And -- if you have absolutely no idea about the "why" -- simply do not copy that move in your own games
Bill Spight wrote:Well, it's OK if you can't figure out why the pro made a play.
Cassandra wrote:Bill Spight wrote:Well, it's OK if you can't figure out why the pro made a play.
And -- if you have absolutely no idea about the "why" -- simply do not copy that move in your own games
tentano wrote:Well, at the very least we can categorically affirm that in order to play go, one must in fact play it.
Boidhre wrote:tentano wrote:Well, at the very least we can categorically affirm that in order to play go, one must in fact play it.
I do wonder whether someone could reach a KGS 10k level without ever playing a game just by diligent study.
tentano wrote:Boidhre wrote:tentano wrote:Well, at the very least we can categorically affirm that in order to play go, one must in fact play it.
I do wonder whether someone could reach a KGS 10k level without ever playing a game just by diligent study.
I think that's theoretically possible, but also enormously pointless. Why skip the fun part until you are "ready" when there's no clear evidence of harm from indulging? Unless you're in an emergency where time efficiency is vital, this sort of practice seems silly.
You'd certainly need at least a hundred hours of study before you'd get to play.
Maybe if study is more fun to someone than actually playing? Given the diversity of the human condition, such people might exist.
Boidhre wrote:tentano wrote:Well, at the very least we can categorically affirm that in order to play go, one must in fact play it.
I do wonder whether someone could reach a KGS 10k level without ever playing a game just by diligent study.
RobertJasiek wrote:
DrStraw wrote:There is another form of study beyond reading books, which is often overlooked. I read a lot of books on my way to 1d but I also spent a lot of time just putting stones on the board by quickly playing out made up games. That way I got to control what aspects of my recent reading showed up on the board and I was able to expose myself to more situations. I would just play out one of these games in ten minutes, clear the board and start again. I really think that this helped me a lot when I was trying to digest the new ideas presented in the reading material. During my kyu days I would think the division was 30-40% playing, 50-60% reading any printed material I could find (there wasn't a lot back then) and about 10% just throwing stones out onto the board.
This throwing stones out allowed me to see many mistakes which I would not have seen in real games. It helped me decide what to avoid in a game as well as what did work.
Bantari wrote: I have been told the same by some of the very strong Asian players I have run into, mostly Japanese and Koreans - they say they had little use for books, never read them much, only for tsume-go and replaying pro games. It further seems to me that most of the strong players I know of, at least afaik, got strong without putting very much emphasis on what you call "Go theory". So while I am not sure that this is the best way to get strong, it is certainly a viable way.
oren wrote:Almost none besides some tsumego books. However, they do have professional teachers letting them know certain ideas that amateurs are going to get from books.
I do remember one author basically saying it would be bad for sales, but he would have never looked at the type of book he just wrote as he was learning Go. It was a funny comment.
Bantari wrote:1. About good vs not-so-good books:
Do you think your evaluation of good books vs. not-so-good books might be personal? In other words, the few books you found helpful, the 10% which conveyed 90% of the knowledge to you, might not be the same 10% which will speak to somebody else?
2. About getting to be strong without reading books:
Do you have any data about all the strong asian amateurs/pros and how many books have they read?
have been told the same by some of the very strong Asian players I have run into, mostly Japanese and Koreans - they say they had little use for books, never read them much, only for tsume-go and replaying pro games.