Robert has a very nice and IMO powerful mnemonic for all this, and he phrased it succinctly with just one verb.
Edited in response to Ed's edit:
Robert has a very nice and IMO powerful mnemonic for all this, and he phrased it succinctly with just one verb.
John Fairbairn wrote:...I see no problem in saying that tenuki to play sente during the endgame is good "fighting spirit".
But from long experience (much longer than yours) I do see a problem.
Koosh wrote:I think John and Kirby should settle this on the Go board.![]()
Knotwilg wrote:When analyzing it, I found we both did correctly so. It was good fighting spirit, I believe.
Knotwilg wrote:Over the years I've come to deliberately avoid Japanese terms because we always got into quarrels (on Sensei's Library) about what they meant. English terms have the advantage that we all know what they mean.
Bill Spight wrote:Knotwilg wrote:Over the years I've come to deliberately avoid Japanese terms because we always got into quarrels (on Sensei's Library) about what they meant. English terms have the advantage that we all know what they mean.
English terms have the advantage that we all think that we know what they mean.
There. Fixed that for ya.
Knotwilg wrote:Bill Spight wrote:Knotwilg wrote:Over the years I've come to deliberately avoid Japanese terms because we always got into quarrels (on Sensei's Library) about what they meant. English terms have the advantage that we all know what they mean.
English terms have the advantage that we all think that we know what they mean.
There. Fixed that for ya.
Well, at least those who have it as their second language are not as handicapped with respect to the native speakers as those who have not a single notion of Japanese vs those who lived there or studied the language.
I know, Bill, that the English language has suffered a lot from its abuse by the rest of us. It's not a pretty sight to the native eye I'm sure.
Bill Spight wrote:Knotwilg wrote:Over the years I've come to deliberately avoid Japanese terms because we always got into quarrels (on Sensei's Library) about what they meant. English terms have the advantage that we all know what they mean.
English terms have the advantage that we all think that we know what they mean.
There. Fixed that for ya.
EdLee wrote:Hi Koosh,
Knotwilg wrote:Fighting spirit embodies:
- not accepting defeat and finding ways to come back
- not expecting easy victory and keep putting pressure on the opponent
- critically assessing the opponent's play, in particular whether it should be answered (see how I avoid "sente")
- sometimes even deliberately ignoring his play in order to get the (mental) upper hand (see how I avoid "tenuki")
- not backing off in a fight because you don't know what will happen if you continue while backing off shows a clear loss
- overall the willingness to confront the opponent head on and not just desire either a cruising victory or a shameful loss
Pio2001 wrote:Knotwilg wrote:Fighting spirit embodies:
- not accepting defeat and finding ways to come back
- not expecting easy victory and keep putting pressure on the opponent
- critically assessing the opponent's play, in particular whether it should be answered (see how I avoid "sente")
- sometimes even deliberately ignoring his play in order to get the (mental) upper hand (see how I avoid "tenuki")
- not backing off in a fight because you don't know what will happen if you continue while backing off shows a clear loss
- overall the willingness to confront the opponent head on and not just desire either a cruising victory or a shameful loss
Hi Knotwilg,
Do you think that all these are related to positional judgement ? Positional judgement has had been my problem once, when I was stuck around 10 kyu kgs. A french book dedicated to it and to the global strategy that follows (reduce or invade if you are late, defend if you are ahead etc.) allowed me to break the barrier and rise to 7 kyu.
I see that there is nearly no books about it in english. I've got Robert Jasiek's first book about it, but it is mostly about the right way of counting, rather than about global strategy. And the only review I read of Lee Chang-Ho's book didn't seem very excited about it.
Today, I've been stuck at 6 kyu KGS for 6 months in spite of a lot of work and study. I feel that I have improved a lot in many aspects of the game, but my win/loss rate doesn't change. I am currently wondering if positional judgement is not, again, the lock that prevents everything I'm learning from being useful.
Krama wrote:Reason why you won't reach x rank is because you are looking for shortcuts.
Krama wrote:In order to not get stuck until you reach your limit is to study everything.