Redundant wrote:Working through a bunch of proofs is quite literally the only way to learn higher mathematics.
Because it is taught like that everywhere. It could also be taught in terms of ideas / methods used in proofs.
Redundant wrote:Working through a bunch of proofs is quite literally the only way to learn higher mathematics.
daal wrote:I've never met a good writer who hasn't read lots of good books.
RobertJasiek wrote:daal wrote:I've never met a good writer who hasn't read lots of good books.
Uh, what is a good book? And surely a writer can improve the level of certain aspects of book quality beyond prior standards(Interesting topic, but off-topic.)
RobertJasiek wrote:Tami wrote:2) You can improve by increasing knowledge
3) You can improve by deepening understanding
Sure... BUT strength is also blocked by your greatest weaknesses. Your 9p fuseki is useless if your reading is 1k - you will be 1k. To improve, you have to improve in MOST (or better: all) fields.
yithril wrote:For me it was always repetition and focusing on my strong points rather than my weak points
John Fairbairn wrote:...
I infer that Tami is in the "want to understand" group (like me) whereas ez4u and Araban are in the "want to be strong" group.
If you want to be strong that means you really want to beat your opponents, like Fischer. You want to win, you care about your rank. You drill, you think hard, you avoid games against weaker players, you ignore go history and other distractions. Winning gives you joy; losing gives you pain. For you, go is like tennis.
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There is nothing that you admire but don't try and do well? Movies, photography, music, go historiography, statistical analysis, physics...Kirby wrote:However, the "fan" perspective that John mentions in his post is an interesting one. Clearly he cares about baseball. Clearly it is something that he values and enjoys. But he is not driven by trying to get stronger as much as an appreciation of the game.
This is admirable to me, because it is a trait that I do not feel that I can relate to in any aspect of my life.
hyperpape wrote:There is nothing that you admire but don't try and do well? Movies, photography, music, go historiography, statistical analysis, physics...Kirby wrote:However, the "fan" perspective that John mentions in his post is an interesting one. Clearly he cares about baseball. Clearly it is something that he values and enjoys. But he is not driven by trying to get stronger as much as an appreciation of the game.
This is admirable to me, because it is a trait that I do not feel that I can relate to in any aspect of my life.
You must be very ambitious.
Helel wrote:Kirby wrote:if I care about a particular thing a lot, then I become competitive with it
Yes, we know.Have you tried therapy?
Kirby wrote:Interesting analogy... I think that I am in the "want to be strong" camp. I care about winning. It's interesting to try to understand the "want to understand" camp, as I don't know if I completely understand them. ;-p
oren wrote:...
So I think it's simply that improvement is less important than finding the aspects of the game that I enjoy. There is one member here, who will go nameless, who enjoys relaying live games to the internet more than playing. I find that odd, but we all like Go.
Does that help at all?
John Fairbairn wrote:
I think all players make a decision (not always conscious) between being strong at go and understanding go.
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The difference is rather like being a player or a fan.
My recommendation for Tami is to stand back from her list. Instead, look at a game through the eyes of Takagawa: view the flow of a game like water, which never fights what is in front but builds up the power to move boulders and always flows on. I think she'll understand go better then, in the sense of making it even more fun. And look at the commentaries by Shuei. I like him because I think that more than anyone else he has the ability to pinpoint the changes in flow of a game without getting bogged down in variations. He, of course, was both strong and he understood. But he was the Meijin of Meijins, after all.