Cassandra wrote:CDavis7M wrote:--Example 7 defines bent-4 in the corner as being living stones, even ...
Bent-four-in-the-corner is
NOT "defined" alive
within J89!!! NOWHERE.
Neither it is "defined" dead anywhere.
Everything depends on the outcome of the position's assessment, utilising "hypothetical play".
If you can't be bothered to read the rules then at least don't make stuff. It just looks bad. Your statement is directly contradicted by what the Japanese Rules Committee wrote. If you just read the Preamble and the Summary of the Revision then your misconceptions would be cleared up.
By the way, even without reading it should be clear to you that your position is wrong because it fails to actually work in some positions, like the one in Example 18. There is consistency, just read to find it. I'll explain.
Before the Revision, there was a ruling that defined stones having Bent-4 in the corner as being dead.
Do you disagree?
Then the Committee took over the Rules and Revised them. The Committee explicitly explains in the
Summary of the Revision that the entire point of the Revision was to provide
definition (meikaku ka 明確化) and theorization (riron ka 理論化) of the rationality (gori sei 合理性) in the existing Japanese Rules.
Do you disagree?
In the Summary and in the actual Example of
Bent-4 in the corner, the Committee specifically states that the Example is
theorizing the reason for the ruling.
Do you disagree?
If the words of the Committee are actually read, I can't see any possibility of disagreement. The Examples in the Revision merely provide definitions and explain the rationality in the previous rulings.
The Japanese Rules still have rulings that define the L&D status of positions. No where do the Rules state that so-called hypothetical-play is part of the actual game of Go.
It is merely a tool for showing the rationality and consistency of the rulings.
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Cassandra wrote:
BTW:
L&D Example 7-1 shows a position, where the single bent-four-in-the-corner is assessed "dead".
L&D Example 7-2 has the bent-four-in-the-corner combined with a mannen-ko, and is also assessed "dead".
L&D Examples 19 and 20 show positions, where the bent-four-in-the-corner is assessed "alive".
Do you know what a
ruling is? It defines the status of one game position. It doesn't define the status for different game positions. Examples 19 and 20 are different positions because the outside liberties are different. This is the entire point of Examples 18-20, they how out the liberties change the status.
By the way, did you bother to read the caption to Example 7? It clearly shows that the Example provides a definition that is consistent with the theorized rationale as the Committee stated.
黒三子は「活き石」であり、白七子は「死に石」である。
1図、2図は白七子が「死に石」である理由。
The first line defines the L&D status.
The second line refers to the diagrams which show the rationale.