Go in the Pentagon
Posted: Mon Aug 16, 2010 12:39 pm
In the past two or three years or so I have come across a special type of diagram in Gekkan Go World, and other places such as a Hikaru no Go video game.
Rather than me messing around trying to upload an image only to end up killing the cat (which we don't have - so no animals will have been harmed in the making of this post), try to draw a pentagon, and join each apex to the centre. Draw, or imagine, calibration marks down each line, enough say to score 1 to 10.
Imagine next that each apex and its line represent an aspect of go. The Hikaru no Go one is typical. One is for "fuseki" (meaning, here, spreading one stones out), one is for "making eyes", one is for "defence", one is for "attack" and the last is for "capturing races". (This is for beginning children. An equivalent for advanced players might include things like, fuseki, joseki, middle game, endgame, tsumego, tenacity, and so on).
A player's go ability is scored and marked on each line, and the calibration points so marked are joined up to create, within the overall regular pentagon, a smaller pentagon that is usually distorted. Typically this small pentagon is coloured in and gives a quick visual assessment of that player's strengths and weaknesses.
My questions are these:
1. Does this tool actually have a name?
2. Is it at all widely used? (Or was it, and it's passed its sell-by date?)
3. Is it any good?
4. Can you do anything else with it?
5. Is a pentagon usual? Why not 6, 7, 8-sided figures? (Maybe five is considered the most that the brain absorbs easily in a quick assessment?)
Rather than me messing around trying to upload an image only to end up killing the cat (which we don't have - so no animals will have been harmed in the making of this post), try to draw a pentagon, and join each apex to the centre. Draw, or imagine, calibration marks down each line, enough say to score 1 to 10.
Imagine next that each apex and its line represent an aspect of go. The Hikaru no Go one is typical. One is for "fuseki" (meaning, here, spreading one stones out), one is for "making eyes", one is for "defence", one is for "attack" and the last is for "capturing races". (This is for beginning children. An equivalent for advanced players might include things like, fuseki, joseki, middle game, endgame, tsumego, tenacity, and so on).
A player's go ability is scored and marked on each line, and the calibration points so marked are joined up to create, within the overall regular pentagon, a smaller pentagon that is usually distorted. Typically this small pentagon is coloured in and gives a quick visual assessment of that player's strengths and weaknesses.
My questions are these:
1. Does this tool actually have a name?
2. Is it at all widely used? (Or was it, and it's passed its sell-by date?)
3. Is it any good?
4. Can you do anything else with it?
5. Is a pentagon usual? Why not 6, 7, 8-sided figures? (Maybe five is considered the most that the brain absorbs easily in a quick assessment?)
