jts wrote:John Fairbairn wrote:Bill used a phrase saying that we "estimate Black's territory as 2 points". Not quite right either, for some of us, I suggest. It's quite possibly the correct usage in mathematics, but in ordinary speech "estimate" suggests vagueness (cf. the well known issue of estimate over quotation when dealing with tradesmen).
Would it be better to say that our estimates are fuzzy, rather than vague? Vagueness implies something like the sorites problem (if I estimate +1 in this area it could just as easily be 0, and if I could estimate 0 it could just as well be -1...), whereas fuzziness implies that my expectations bear a somewhat loose relation to reality.
Yes, the values of positions are technically fuzzy. You can also give them a probabilistic semantics.
Similarly, as Bill says, if my estimates of the score in all the remaining contested areas are all correct (that is, if they are good estimates), then even if I estimated too high for Black here and too high for White there, I estimated the total score perfectly.
I do not recognize what I said in that.
For people like me, it is easy enough to understand that the second figure (1, relating to 'b') has to be treated differently from the 'a' figure, to cover the fact that it is lower down the food chain and less likely to be used. But the reason for treating it in this particular way is far from obvious - I'm still making a leap of faith. OM admits it is fiddly but claims you get used to it.
Chaining together the probabilities in this way is very standard. What are the odds of flipping two coins and having them both come up heads? What are the odds of just missing your train at Harvard Square, and then again at Park Street? What are the odds of rolling ten or higher on two dice?
To figure out the probability of any event that's composed of two independent events, you just multiply the probability of the first event by the probability of the second. (So you get 25%, 100%, 11%.) In this case, OM is suggesting that the probability of Black getting a move that's worth a specific number of points is 50%.
At my level, that's clearly a fiddly assumptionBut multiplying the probability of the follow-up by the probability of the initial move is the only thing to do.
There is the practical value of the probabilistic semantics.