yet another fundamentals discussion

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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by RobertJasiek »

entropi wrote:First, my initial interpretation of the term was "a (probably huge) set of well defined simple rules that boosts your strength when internalized (i.e. not just learned but overlearned)".

What I was saying was that such a set of rules does not exist, or if it existed it would be so unreasonably large that it would be practically useless.


At the risk of repeating myself, I think that such a set of simple or reasonably simple rules exist (and for a good part but with topic restrictions is in my books) for great parts of the fundamentals but mostly do not exist yet for some parts of the fundamentals (like life and death problem solving) and for the necessity to read (ahead moves and variations) or count (intersections when assessing positional judgements). The ability to count does not require a rule but elementary school practice. The ability to read at all is also not (sufficiently) learned by learning rules. Rules can "only" prune the reading amount. For life and death, rules are still very weak.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by tchan001 »

http://tchan001.wordpress.com/2011/06/0 ... lculation/
Let's see what Cho Chikun has to say about what is important
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by kivi »

xed_over wrote:
entropi wrote:
Toge wrote:What do you mean by fundamentals? Is this a critique of Kageyama's view on fundamentals?


Yes. What I mean by fundamentals is what Kageyama calls fundamentals.


Here's your problem... you're reading Kagayama :tmbdown:


To me, it sounds like the original poster read the foreword/intro/back-cover of Kageyama's book, saw enough sentences with "study fundamentals", and abandoned the book without reading any actual content.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by daal »

kivi wrote:
To me, it sounds like the original poster read the foreword/intro/back-cover of Kageyama's book, saw enough sentences with "study fundamentals", and abandoned the book without reading any actual content.

If you don't feel like reading it, maybe you should give it away to a friend or random player at your local club.


Wow, that sounds obnoxious! He wrote that he's re-reading it. Did you actually read his post, or just a few sentences?

For those of you who have also read it, please see my poll.
Last edited by daal on Thu Jun 09, 2011 3:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by singular »

tchan001 wrote:http://tchan001.wordpress.com/2011/06/09/the-important-skill-of-calculation/
Let's see what Cho Chikun has to say about what is important


Thanks for translating that tchan001.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by entropi »

kivi wrote:To me, it sounds like the original poster read the foreword/intro/back-cover of Kageyama's book, saw enough sentences with "study fundamentals", and abandoned the book without reading any actual content.

[/quote]

No, I read it. I would not write any comments about any book without reading it.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by entropi »

RobertJasiek wrote:
entropi wrote:First, my initial interpretation of the term was "a (probably huge) set of well defined simple rules that boosts your strength when internalized (i.e. not just learned but overlearned)".

What I was saying was that such a set of rules does not exist, or if it existed it would be so unreasonably large that it would be practically useless.


At the risk of repeating myself, I think that such a set of simple or reasonably simple rules exist (and for a good part but with topic restrictions is in my books) for great parts of the fundamentals but mostly do not exist yet for some parts of the fundamentals (like life and death problem solving) and for the necessity to read (ahead moves and variations) or count (intersections when assessing positional judgements). The ability to count does not require a rule but elementary school practice. The ability to read at all is also not (sufficiently) learned by learning rules. Rules can "only" prune the reading amount. For life and death, rules are still very weak.


I will have a look at your books Robert. If they present such simple and useful rules (which of course cannot replace reading but help tree pruning as you say) I will happily recommend them here :)
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by kivi »

daal wrote:Wow, that sounds obnoxious! He wrote that he's re-reading it. Did you actually read his post, or just a few sentences?


The things is, I am not saying or claiming he/she/they didn't read the book. Somebody said his problem is that he is reading Kageyama. I think, on the contrary, the problem is arising from not reading Kageyama. I don't mean not putting your eyes on the text, but maybe not grasping the point of the book. Because the book is full of examples of very useful fundamental ideas, quite opposite of what I would call non-existent or useless.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by Loons »

I am a proponent of Kageyama's Lessons in the Fundamentals of Go, so I will weigh in. Just a little redundantly (My hat off to most of the last three pages).

His "fundamentals" are go-to answers for common conundrums. I'm not sure if you are agreeing with him that this is what "fundamentals" should mean. I think this thread has been a little sidetracked by speculation on what could possibly be meant by that word.

Some examples I recall:
A situation with a ladder, it is specified that the ladder does not work for you (enraged me the first time I puzzled over it). His answer was "ladder block, of course!" Rather than try to come up with something fancy. You got peeped? Connect it. Rather than trying to come up with something fancy. You couldn't connect a peep, and the opponent pushed in? Still play the block, even though your opponent will get to cut one side. Don't start trying to invent something new. How to tell the best net, even when more than one net works.

(NB he emphasizes surety by calculation (ie. Be sure you can read the ladder. You can read the ladder.).)

My post really just becoming longer:
When I jump at the end of my 4-4 point, low approach, one space low pincer, 3-3 invasion joseki, I am avoiding pushing from behind. Fundamentals! When I am watching two 7ds duke it out at the top of the active games tab on KGS, and I am having trouble seeing how white will resolve a corner fight- and suddenly, he skilfully forces black to push from behind to live. My fingers tear over the kibitz: "White's thickness is superior!" Same fundamental.

Really, probably too long:
Note the format of his book. Present and illustrate a common situation, featuring a kyu or low dan mistake followed by a common (so far as pros are concerned) correct answer. A series of progressively trickier problems where that technique - or the threat of that technique - leads to success.
Last edited by Loons on Thu Jun 09, 2011 10:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by RobertJasiek »

entropi wrote:If they present such simple and useful rules


I do not call them rules there but principles, definitions, methods, values. Most are very simple via simple to reasonably easy. There is some problem with their number: hundreds of guidelines. This means that different rules cannot always be applied without conflicts. I offer some suggestions and methods about analysing then - like suggesting to do a positional judgement if simpler rules do not provide an unequivocal answer. Of course, the fundamentals alone are not the Stein der Weisen and it is, in principle, always possible that a position requires more advanced understanding than what fundamentals alone can offer. Rather my books provide a high probability of greatly helping with answering a positional problem whenever it can be solved already on the levels of fundamentals.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by jts »

As I was reviewing this game, I realized that I had made (in addition to many modest mistakes) a huge mistake at move 277:

[deleted]
(A17 kills)

Now, as you can see one reason I made this miserable blunder was that I only thought for three seconds about the move, when it was worth using up my entire remaining time to make sure I got it right.

This got me thinking about this conversation. Why on earth did I not only make "5 in the corner", but make it instinctively? It's a combination of (i) confusing {fill using nakade shape, leaving one extra space} with {fill with nakade+1 shape, leaving one extra space}, and (ii) doing a batch of tsumego at one point which involved 5 in the corner in a shortage-of-liberties situation, or something like that.

So where does this leave fundamentals? What are fundamentals? You could say that one fundamental is knowing nakade so well that it's like breathing; but then if a wrong shape has wormed it's way into your subconscious, you (I, hehe) make mistakes that you could have avoided with reading if you were simply unsure what to do. But if we reverse it and say no, reading things out is the fundamental, then what is there to "fundamentals" other than sheer mental brawn?
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by Loons »

@jts

Speaking for Kageyama, you didn't check the fundamental technique of reducing eyespace in L&D, instead you tried an inside move.

Your opponent made the same mistake the previous move, trying some kind of inside play rather than increasing his eyespace, preserving life (through seki edit: durr not seki).

(Edit: NB just commenting on 276 and 77)

Further verbosity in the name of helpfulness:

Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$Wc Reducing eyespace after 268.
$$ +-----------------------------
$$ | . . . . . 4 . . . . . . O X
$$ | . . . 3 2 . . . . . . X . O
$$ | . O 1 O O X X X X X X . O O
$$ | . . X X X X O O O O X O O X
$$ | X X X X O O . . . X O X . X[/go]

Exceptions are common:
Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$Wc On further reflection, W is dead regardless. Fun read though.
$$ +-----------------------------
$$ | . 1 . . . . . . . . . . O X
$$ | . . . . . . . . . . . X . O
$$ | . O . O O X X X X X X . O O
$$ | . . X X X X O O O O X O O X
$$ | X X X X O O . . . X O X . X[/go]


And a sensei's link relevant to your 269.
Last edited by Loons on Thu Jun 09, 2011 11:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: yet another fundamentals discussion

Post by jts »

Thanks, Loons. That's really helpful.

(And I can't believe that I didn't see that after the hane, white's left with an L-group! :oops: :oops: :oops: :oops: :oops: :oops: :oops: :oops: That's two chances I had to reduce the eyespace.)
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