Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

For discussing go rule sets and rule theory
Bill Spight
Honinbo
Posts: 10905
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2010 1:24 pm
Has thanked: 3651 times
Been thanked: 3373 times

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by Bill Spight »

jaeup wrote:
Bill Spight wrote:OC, ishi in Japanese can be singular or plural, and the Japanese rules do not include words like string, chain, dragon or group. To the extent to which that causes ambiguity or confusion, well, the Japanese can be inscrutable even to themselves. ;)
Right. You understand the subtlety of the situation very well. Because of such ambiguity, its direct translation into English is simply impossible. The translator (James Davies, right?) ended up using the word "group", but I cannot agree with such a style change. The actual rule always talks about "stone(s)", such as "this stone is a seki stone". It never says like "this group is alive by seki".

Fortunately, the structure and practice of the Korean language allows one to make an almost perfect direct translation of the Japanese rule. Of course, unfortunately, after finishing the translation, I still cannot decide if a specific sentence talks about one stone each or a collection of stones. :)
Davies used group for a set consisting of a single stone or of rookwise connected stones of the same color. Unfortunately, group was already used in English for a not well defined collection of stones of the same color. Be that as it may, Davies removed the ambiguity of the Japanese ishi for the question of having a liberty. :)
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins

Visualize whirled peas.

Everything with love. Stay safe.
jann
Lives in gote
Posts: 445
Joined: Tue May 14, 2019 8:00 pm
GD Posts: 0
Been thanked: 37 times

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by jann »

I doubt adding seki as an exception (to exclude territory) is the right approach. It seems more robust to define territory first (transformable to pass-alive). Then dead stones are only those in territory, and seki is unnecessary.
Bill Spight
Honinbo
Posts: 10905
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2010 1:24 pm
Has thanked: 3651 times
Been thanked: 3373 times

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by Bill Spight »

jann wrote:I doubt adding seki as an exception (to exclude territory) is the right approach. It seems more robust to define territory first (transformable to pass-alive). Then dead stones are only those in territory, and seki is unnecessary.
It would be interesting to see such rules. :)

I suspect that if it were easy to make such rules, the Japanese and Koreans would have done so already. Humans are good with handling exceptions, so perhaps the easiest rules to craft and also to understand are those that say, thus and such points are territory, with the following exceptions. Anyway, it would be interesting to see rules that do not take that approach.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins

Visualize whirled peas.

Everything with love. Stay safe.
User avatar
Cassandra
Lives in sente
Posts: 1326
Joined: Wed Apr 28, 2010 11:33 am
Rank: German 1 Kyu
GD Posts: 0
Has thanked: 14 times
Been thanked: 153 times

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by Cassandra »

Bill Spight wrote:
jann wrote:I doubt adding seki as an exception (to exclude territory) is the right approach. It seems more robust to define territory first (transformable to pass-alive). Then dead stones are only those in territory, and seki is unnecessary.
It would be interesting to see such rules. :)
Perhaps Robert does have a set of these?

By the way, in Japanese (-style) rules, I think that it will be difficult to overcome the obstacle that there are three types of groups at the end of the game ...
-- Groups that have two eyes (including e.g. the snap-back subset), and so cannot be captured.
-- Groups that do not have two eyes, but cannot / will not be captured ("usually" called "seki"-groups).
-- Groups that do not match one of the definitions above ("usually" called "dead" groups).
... and that a definition of territory is needed
-- e.g. points enclosed by two-eyed groups.

It would be possible to choose the definition of "two-eyed group" and "seki group", and to NOT define "dead" groups (which are just the rest). And to NEVER mention "neutral points".

However, if you wanted to define "territory", but not "seki-group", you would have to incorporate something (that jann does not want to call "exception") in your set of conditions for defining "territory".
The really most difficult Go problem ever: https://igohatsuyoron120.de/index.htm
Igo Hatsuyōron #120 (really solved by KataGo)
RobertJasiek
Judan
Posts: 6272
Joined: Tue Apr 27, 2010 8:54 pm
GD Posts: 0
Been thanked: 797 times
Contact:

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by RobertJasiek »

Bill Spight wrote: I suspect that if it were easy to make such rules, the Japanese and Koreans would have done so already.
Once hypothetical play was defined, it was easy to make such rules:

http://home.snafu.de/jasiek/sj.html

Since it is easy and the Japanese and Koreans do not use such or similar, on the high level easy rules, they want unnecessarily complicated rules.
jann
Lives in gote
Posts: 445
Joined: Tue May 14, 2019 8:00 pm
GD Posts: 0
Been thanked: 37 times

Re: Question about Eyes in Seki Under Japanese Rules

Post by jann »

Cassandra wrote:However, if you wanted to define "territory", but not "seki-group", you would have to incorporate something (that jann does not want to call "exception") in your set of conditions for defining "territory".
I don't see why. What I wrote above seems to work without this:
jann wrote:It seems more robust to define territory first (transformable to pass-alive). Then dead stones are only those in territory, and seki is unnecessary.
BTW, I think the only reason to exclude territory in sekis is implicit in this approach. Otherwise explicitly excluding them seems pointless and unnecessary complication (burden for no gain). So defining seki in either way seems a bad idea.
Post Reply