wineandgolover wrote:IMHO, there are many factors in how fast and far we can improve at go:
The younger, the easier.
The smarter, the easier.
The greater spatial awareness, the easier.
The more time dedicated, the easier.
The more competitive, the easier.
That said, I do believe we all have an individual theoretical limit beyond on which we cannot improve. The good news is I think none of us, not even Lee Sedol or other top pros, have hit that limit, because it is just that, a limit, and our play may be asymptotic.
I know some 10 kyu and 5 kyu who have been playing for years, routinely take lessons, and always attend Congress. These are smart people. But some of them will never hit dan. Maybe it's sad, but that's just the way it is. For some reason, their theoretical limit may be less than 1d.
And for those of you late teen or early twenty early year olds that believe if you try really hard you could become Lee Sedol, I am sorry to say, color me skeptical for two reasons. First and foremost, hundreds of thousands of people are exposed to the game and culture at a very young age, and yet we still only get a god of go once a generation. So even if you had that total immersion from the beginning, the odds that you as an individual would be that person are extremely slim. Second, you weren't raised in that culture, and you didn't learn at that age, and that just makes the odds longer.
Could you make pro? Maybe, that is a much lower bar, which has already been cleared by Westerners. Could you make 9P? Less likely, but still possible, as demonstrated by Michael Redmond. Could you become a world champion? Well, I've watched Mr Redmond comment on a world champion's game with awe at his skill. The way Redmond spoke, it was as if the champion was as far above the 9P, as the 9P is above an insei. So, I'd say the odds of World Champion are incredibly slim for any individual Westerner. That said, as we grow the game in the West, some day it will happen, and I hope I am here to see it.
I don't mean to be discouraging, but it's just numbers, right? That said, if go is your passion, and becoming great is your ambition, and so long as your goal isn't monetary remuneration*, I say go for it. Pursue your dream, and at the same time, prove me wrong.
* If your goal is the cash, and you are super-smart enough to become a go-pro despite your late start, there will be far easier, yet still legal, ways to make lots of money.
I am still waiting for a go savant, ether born this way or some mid 20 years old person having a stroke or a head injury which causes them to perform at more than human level. Just go look at the savants that exist now or for example Kim Peek.
This guy had the brain similar to ours (with some differences in two hemispheres or something but if you gave me his brain and the brain of some other random person I couldn't tell the difference) and yet he was able to accomplish feats no human would even dream about.
Then you have human calculators and people like Derek (forgot the last name) the piano savant...
Go is so much more natural than chess and if there will ever be a board game savant I think we are going to see one in go before we see one in chess.
Just imagine a go savant who plays brilliant moves but can hardly explain how they do it, they take a glimpse of the board and know the score, they can slove any tsumego within seconds.
Maybe I should bash my head against the wall, I think I have more chance of becoming a go pro this way than actually studying the game itself.