oren wrote:I'm just pointing out I think studying joseki is less efficient. I understand you want to sell books, but I just disagree on when people need to study joseki.
I don't have any books to sell, and I still agree with (what I think) Robert is saying. When I was a DDK, familiarizing myself with a number of josekis and joseki ideas ("principles") gave me something in addition to reading practice that tsumego didn't offer me: a feeling of having an inkling of an idea what to do after the immediate opening. This made me feel more confident, and it dispelled a bit of the fog of feeling completely lost.
I'm not suggesting a DDK should actually memorize more than the basic sequence, and no josekis more complex than 15 or so moves. Maybe a couple of variations for the extremely common and simple ones, all in an attempt to understand why it's not a bad idea to play that way. Unlike many people, I'm not opposed to the concept of memorizing things without initially fully understanding them. I believe that understanding can follow memorization, though the risk is that the "reasons" we make up for why something is played are incorrect. That's why having a book explaining these principles can be valuable.
At the end, though, what matters is (and I sound like a broken record) the fun element. Cttsui seems interested in and curious about josekis, so studying josekis is a good idea. There's little harm in it and curiosity and interest accelerate learning. It is more or less efficient than other approaches? I don't know. It depends on the individual and how they learn best.



