nagano wrote:Go is not philosophy it is logic. ... Tibetan ...
... is a contratiction in terms.
I do not think that Western "logic" is the best foundation to understand an East-Asian game.
nagano wrote:Go is not philosophy it is logic. ... Tibetan ...
RobertJasiek wrote:Go is a world-wide game.
Logic is a world-wide science.
As a complete information game, logic is a very suitable foundation for understanding Go.
RobertJasiek wrote:Can you derive from philosophy a) why the Japanese professionals chose to write J1989 §12 as they did and b) why it might or might not be appropriate to have this rule in the context of the other J1989 rules?
deleted wrote:The history of Go ... is a history of struggle, discovery, and dispute even before any westerner was on the scene.
Cassandra wrote:I would agree withThe history of Go ... is a history of struggle, discovery, and dispute even before any westerner was on the scene.
The struggle for RULES is a Western one.
Harleqin wrote:The history of Go rules is a history of struggle, discovery, and dispute even before any westerner was on the scene.
I think that even today not every professional player in Japan will know what Japanese Rules exactly say.
Harleqin wrote:Honinbo Shusai held the opinion that a ko that cannot be won by one player can be left open by the other, and counts as a point (which I believe is correct).
Honinbo Shuei held the opinion that a moonshine ko could live (which I believe is wrong).
Cassandra wrote:I suppose that Japanese refrain from cutting every detail into a "rule", because they are not sure about the implications [...]
Harleqin wrote:Well, yes: the struggle is still going on. Why should we not discuss it?
RobertJasiek wrote:Cassandra you are wrong wth the following:
6) "in Japanese understanding, it is neither necessary to have written rules". Wrong. Since 1949 it has been considered necessarsy among Japanese professionals.
Cassandra wrote:Just a short reply.RobertJasiek wrote:Cassandra you are wrong wth the following:
6) "in Japanese understanding, it is neither necessary to have written rules". Wrong. Since 1949 it has been considered necessarsy among Japanese professionals.
Obviously, they could live over 1250 years without.
By the way: Japanese style is "Watch the master and imitate.", not "Follow written instructions."