Bill Spight wrote:Chen did not apply the group tax to the seki, and I agree. But modern stone scorers in the early 20th century would have, with the same result.
Interesting. Would modern stone scorers have taxed white twice in a seki like the following? White is quite a bit more disconnected here than black was in Jia Xuan's game.
Bill Spight wrote:Now in practice, humans would quickly see that they did not actually have to play the game out to capacity, they could count territory as equivalent to stones as long as they remembered not to count the eyes necessary for life. Therein, I think, lies the origin of the group tax. Applying it to seki was a later refinement, if we can call it that.
I agree this all makes sense if coming from stone scoring ("your score is the number of stones you have on the board"). Stone scoring seems quite elegant from a simplicity of rules standpoint; even area scoring needs extra definitions. I wonder how much strategy would differ from current go with the small extra incentive to stay connected and cut your opponent.