Differences between Western and Asian Books

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Marcus
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by Marcus »

zslane wrote:But in a culture where learning is meant to occur through osmosis, by merely being in the presence of masters delivering opaque "wisdom", it would likely seem that way and not be terribly welcome.


It's interesting that you feel this way. I would suspect that there are advantages to either teaching method described: that of explicit knowledge being delivered through inquisition, and that of implicit learning through guidance and support.

I agree that there are bad teachers of both types, and that you always need to be careful when selecting a teacher. When the teaching style you seek is explicit knowledge transfer, the important thing to look for in a teacher is one who can explain things in terms that you yourself find easy to understand. This might not be the same from one student to the next. For instance, Robert may find Teacher X is explaining things poorly for him, while Teacher Y is doing a much better job of answering his questions. I may find the opposite is true for myself.

As for the other style of teaching, where the teacher is there to offer guidance and support, it is more important for the teacher to be motivating to you, I think. This would ideally drive you to flesh out your own ideas and observations with self study, while the teacher provides you with new ideas and observations that you may not have thought of yourself without that bit of guidance.

I tend to respond better to the latter style of teaching, rather than by asking a lot of questions and having specific details explained to me verbally or through visual aids. Don't get me wrong, I think a combination of the two styles is best when learning something deep and complex. However, I've always found that with complex ideas and subjects it is very hard to ask GOOD questions, and even harder to find teachers who can answer them in ways that I can easily understand. I've always found I learned so much more by doing things myself and experiencing. Teachers who have impacted me most in life have not impacted me by dumping detailed knowledge in my lap ... rather they have provided the opportunities for me to experience challenges and situations which I would have found difficult to engage in without their help and guidance. This is not just for Go (I haven't really had any teachers for Go, beyond some SDK players on KGS when I was DDK), but in academics as well.
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by lemmata »

I was once told (second-hand) that "how to teach go" is a topic of both study and research at Myoungji University in Korea. Given the lively discussion here, many of us would be interested in finding out what the people there think about this topic. Does anyone here have access to what they're doing over there?
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by Kirby »

lemmata wrote:I was once told (second-hand) that "how to teach go" is a topic of both study and research at Myoungji University in Korea. Given the lively discussion here, many of us would be interested in finding out what the people there think about this topic. Does anyone here have access to what they're doing over there?


I believe courses and descriptions are listed online. if i recall though, the courses are not only about getting stronger but about baduk history and culture, too.
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by palapiku »

HermanHiddema wrote:To a professional, in many situations, the question of "why?" is a nonsense question. They just gave you the correct answer. E.g:

What should I play here?
Move A is the correct move here.
Why?
Uhhh, because it is better than the other moves?

I once attended a classical guitar workshop led by a fantastic world-class performer.

Someone asked him: "How do you play so fast?"

"Uhhh.... like this" *plays a really fast melody*
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by Bonobo »

Reminds me of that anecdote about a composer (Beethoven?) who had just played a sonata (?) for a visitor (?), who then asked the composer about the meaning of what he just had played, to which the composer replied by going back to his piano and playing exactly the same piece again :-D
“The only difference between me and a madman is that I’m not mad.” — Salvador Dali ★ Play a slooooow correspondence game with me on OGS? :)
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Post by EdLee »

palapiku wrote:Someone asked him: "How do you play so fast?"
"Uhhh.... like this" *plays a really fast melody*
Hmmm, very Zen. :)
A typical Zen story:
Person to monk, "How deep is this pond?"
The monk promptly replied by throwing the person into the pond.

Similar to palapiku's story:
A martial art student asked a senior, "How do you make an ippon-ken (one-point fist)?"
The latter: "Like this," and promptly demonstrated on the junior's torso, and over the course of the following week,
the impact point went through different shades of black, brown, yellow, blue, and green. (True story. :))
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Re: Differences between Western and Asian Books

Post by Aten »

- When I was living in Japan, Why? was often a challenge to provide justification. If a stronger player said, "You should have played here," without explanation, one might reply, "If I had played there, . . ." to get an explanation, which was usually a variation or two. Or one might simply say, "I don't understand." Such replies invite the teacher to explain, but do not challenge them.

I'm reminded of Feynman at Princeton, and Los Alamos, where he was liked because he actually would challenge an idea on its own merits, and not defer authority to an Oppenheimer or Einstein. Sometimes people wanted to bounce ideas off one another, and far too many people were scared to question people because of their stature.

Not quite the same with a neophyte and an expert, but sometimes answers are wrapped up in their *causes* and their *purposes*.

There isnt that much problem in chess though, where some annotations or notes usually reflect a lot of the 'why' or interesting positions. And I think it's probably true with Kifu as well, where the whole point of the commentary is to show some explanations and justifications for stuff.

Maybe just personal instruction, and casual commentary on games, has all that baggage, some of it cultural.

One thing i remember seeing with chess with club players going through games with beginners, and showing weak and strong moves, is that sometimes they were wrong 50% of the time... Sometimes the beginners had good ideas which were poopoohed by the higher ups, and sometimes the recommendations from 'authority' were tactically unsound... But with a game score and computer analysis and making notes of people's comments from both sides, you can definately get an 'eye-opener' on how sometimes, advice from stronger players wasnt all that great, unless you had people who were candidate masters, or you really really looked at a game slowly and thoroughly... [and yes computers are great at correcting anyone's analysis]

I also see a similiarity with the focus of some on tsumego, just like some in chess always force things down to 'tactics'. That you can't really do anything right till you get your tactical ability at an 1800 level player, and that will always trip you up. And you see different styles of teaching and training, like the Soviet School or some where you can get lots of drills with endgames and then a zillion tactical puzzlers and stuff.

I'm still not sure of the differences, with Western and Eastern go books, but I still think that annotated games with Kifu, definately do ask the whys... and there's a lot of magic bullet books for amateur players in japan [great ones and not so great ones].... And there does seem to be a lot of drill with life and death and tsumego, but i think the west is catching up pretty good.

If anything, the more that's translated, the better off things will be in the 'long term' for the game. And it's just as true for chess, there's lots in German that wasn't translated and still quite interesting, and a lot of the Soviet stuff was translated too. Fischer bit the bullet and got fluent in Russian for the information, damn the translators.. And well hopefully we'll see more Japanese go material from the 1930s to today, come out in english.. maybe..


And hows this for contrast, maybe the Japanese ask why more than the Koreans

- The Strongest Drills Aiming for the Top 1% (12 books) - Kien Books 2010-2011
[These books seem to originate from Korean baduk books published by Oromedia. Particularly the series ‘Top 1%’. Whereas the original Korean books are densely packed with problems and usually answers with just the main line, the Japanese versions seem to offer a lot more information with short explanations, variations and failures.]

and that series is useful for 3-Dan and higher... but the Japanese translation adds a ton of extra explanations...

why?

because people want to know why!
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