Kirby wrote:
hyperpape wrote:
Citing your earlier post isn't really effective if it just begs the question.
People don't usually agree with me anyway, and it's just a waste of time if I post a bunch saying the same thing in 15 different ways when nobody is going to really be affected by what I say anyway.
The idea actually isn't to repeat the same thing, but to change it - make explicit connections that were implicit, remove ambiguities and replace them with claims that can only be taken one way, replace arguments that other people think are dubious with new arguments that dispose of their objections.
Quote:
To rephrase one more time, since I'm posting already, the purpose of the ranking system is to discretely capture the probability of someone winning the game at a given handicap.
I agree with you!
Quote:
As there are a number of influences that effect this, they should also be captured in that probability.
This sounds good, but I'm already curious - how could an influence that affects whether you win a game
not be captured by a ranking system that discretely captures the probability of winning a game? How could the ranking system be smart enough to break down tesuji, endgame, reading, and ignore some of these influences?
Quote:
If this means your rank drops because you have a poor connection, it has an accurate effect on the probability.
Aha. Here we see the problem. You've started by stating something about how a ranking system works: then you've assumed that you can lose a game by having a bad connection, and drawn the (valid) conclusion that the ranking system should reflect that loss, and finally concluded that the ranking system cannot reflect this influence properly unless the people subject to it are awarded losses.
We can try a similar argument: If your rank drops because you have an offensive odor, this has an accurate effect on the probability. You will lose games when you are disqualified for poor hygiene. Your rank should go down to reflect this. Therefore, the AGA needs to disqualify people who smell bad so that their rank accurately reflects the games they've lost. (Do you see how the argument "works"? Do you understand that whether or not we want to award DQs for hygiene has nothing to do with the formal definition of a ranking system?)
Quote:
To say that escaping should not be accounted for in this type of situation abuses the entire concept of time settings.
quod erat something something
Quote:
Further, from personal experience, I don't recall a time I've ever had a connection problem. And I don't remember a time that I've ever lost because of an opponent playing "rudely". But I can remember escapers. So from my personal set of data points, this solution is superior to the others that have been presented.
This is not a matter of my personal preference. It is a conclusion obtained by looking at what has happened in my actual games, interpreting the meaning of time settings, and what it even means for something to be a ranked game... You speak as if I am arguing based on my own values. But I sincerely do not see this to be the case.
You seem to vacillate a little bit about how much your own standpoint matters here. You understand that you are having a gut reaction based on your experience on both sides of connection issues, escaping, and so on. But you want to insist that even if the gut reaction is based on your personal experience, it's not a personal preference.
Would it be easier for you to think about this if we said there are two levels, a more general level of principles and a more specific level of practical cost-benefit analysis? You can imagine this for a political issue like, say, bridge construction. A group of citizens might have a high-level discussions about the goals of urban transportation policy, the role of various levels of government, and how to balance transportation priorities against the municipality's other projects. But even if you hash out those arguments and agree on some general principles, your views on how those principles apply to a specific bridge-demolition project are going to be hugely biased by your own life - do you drive, do you bike, are you mostly a pedestrian, do you live in the city or commute into/around it, etc.
The best way to keep a clear mind in such discussions would be to be clear about whether you are arguing about principles or simply stating which way your gut is leading you and, if the latter, try to be as clear as possible about what empirical assumptions your gut is leading you to make, so that other people have a chance to change your mind. If you are very clear that you just have a gut feeling that escapers should be taken out back and shot, no one will argue with you (and no one will care very much). People object to your opinions because you often make heart-felt, interesting points that are vitiated by a smidgen of obscure thinking and so on. They hope that the objections will either help you formulate a stronger case, or else help you see the other side of the question.
Quote:
I feel wholeheartedly that this position is more logical than the alternatives that have been presented.
I hope you understand why I feel that your argument derived from a general analysis of the ranking system is circular (i.e., question-begging, illogical). I don't think you are lying or trying to confuse us: you often post as though you've been accused of dissembling. Nothing could be further from any of our minds. If we criticize, this is purely because we think you are an earnest and intelligent proponent of a view whose advantages we would like to learn more about.