Understanding of Top Level Professionals
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RobertJasiek
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Understanding of Top Level Professionals
In http://www.lifein19x19.com/forum/viewto ... 91#p128391 Knotwilg writes that the top level professionals' reading, theoretical understanding and strategy combined into true understanding at a level that amateurs did not even start to comprehend. I disagree; where is there any evidence for this? Top level professionals read faster, deeper and more; calculate endgames faster and presumably on average more accurately; know a few more concepts not all amateurs know. All fine and well, but where is the "level that amateurs do not even start to comprehend"? We are not in early Edo, where much go knowledge was kept secret. If professionals should have understanding far beyond amateurs' ability of comprehension, then professionals could at least prove that by teaching well things that would be clearly above amateurs' ability of comprehension. However, pretty much all to be seen is about the aspects mentioned above, where professionals are better, but which are by no means far above amateurs' principle ability of comprehension. Rather such aspects would typically be above amateurs' ability of thinking speed. No doubt does this make professionals the stronger players, but the gap to top level players is not lightyears and quantum jumps.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Just for clarification:RobertJasiek wrote:[..] the gap to top level players is not lightyears and quantum jumps.
Light year = huge
Quantum leap = tiny … but may have huge effects!
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Bill Spight
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
In the vernacular, a quantum jump is a significant discontinuity, typically large.Bonobo wrote:Just for clarification:RobertJasiek wrote:[..] the gap to top level players is not lightyears and quantum jumps.
Light year = huge
Quantum leap = tiny … but may have huge effects!
Quantum leap I am not so sure about, since it is used in popular writing about quantum mechanics.
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At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
I had to zoom in 5 times before I could read this.Bonobo wrote:tiny
Patience, grasshopper.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Think how many times you would have to zoom in to see a quantum!daal wrote:I had to zoom in 5 times before I could read this.Bonobo wrote:tiny
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Bill Spight wrote:Yes, I know, this is a common misunderstanding, that’s why I couldn’t resist the impulse to be a smart alecBonobo wrote:[..]
In the vernacular, a quantum jump is a significant discontinuity, typically large.
Quantum leap I am not so sure about, since it is used in popular writing about quantum mechanics.
Quantum Jump = Quantum Leap
From the Wikipedia page I linked to:Wikipedia wrote:Although changes of quantum state occur on the submicroscopic level, in popular discourse, the term "quantum leap" refers to a large increase.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
The reason top pros don't display a teaching of concepts beyond what western literature has to offer is that there's little for them to gain from it, to make up for to the distraction from professional play.
Professionals do not only calculate more deeply, they more importantly cut off branches earlier and consider less branches. That is because they have heuristics which we don't have. These heuristics come from deep understanding.
But that's not all. To use an old metaphor, they first see the tree, then the leaves, then the tree with the leaves, until the tree and the leaves are one. Perhaps this deep understanding is hard to convey and transfer to amateurs.
Again, I'm not saying amateur players shouldn't write books. But their games are only useful study objects to see that 5d make horrible mistakes too and there's no reason to be impressed by them.
Professionals do not only calculate more deeply, they more importantly cut off branches earlier and consider less branches. That is because they have heuristics which we don't have. These heuristics come from deep understanding.
But that's not all. To use an old metaphor, they first see the tree, then the leaves, then the tree with the leaves, until the tree and the leaves are one. Perhaps this deep understanding is hard to convey and transfer to amateurs.
Again, I'm not saying amateur players shouldn't write books. But their games are only useful study objects to see that 5d make horrible mistakes too and there's no reason to be impressed by them.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
At least one 9p pro has lost by self atari. Probably should have looked at that branch more carefully before heuristically pruning it so early with his deep understanding.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
An incredible number of professionals has taught go in Western countries for the only or major reason to better spread go theory knowledge. They had every motivation to reveal their knowledge, but AFAICS they did not hint at deep mysteries in the professionals' knowledge.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
For the fields of RJ's investigation, like ko or territory evaluation, he certainly is an expert on a theoretical level. So is Erwyn Berlekamp on the mathematical endgame, despite his being 10 kyu at the time of writing. But for me it is hard to recognize RJ as an expert on how to play go, even if he's 5 dan.
When voicing this opinion on L19, I met with lots of resistance, both because people thought I look down upon his writings, which I don't (because for one thing I've read none of his books, only his public contributions and second I applaud his advertised original approach) and because they overestimate the understanding of a 5 dan. I stated the provocative "to the eyes of a 9p, the difference between a 7 kyu or a 5 dan are negligible: they roughly make the same kind of blunders".
I stand behind that blunt statement. As Barry Mazur's suggested in the field of mathematics, or any field, at some point in the professional life, one experiences a paradigm shift that sees all acquired knowledge in a new light. With the old eastern image, the tree and the leave become one.
Does this mean only 9p's can teach or write? Certainly not. Amateurs like RJ, myself and the rest of you must cautiously and studiously expand the proverbial Sensei's Library because the pros will not do it and definitely not for free. When new players arrive at the club, there is none but ourselves to train them. But when RJ suggests that kyu players study his games, that is a bridge too far. There are thousands of pro games in the public domain and those should be studied.
When voicing this opinion on L19, I met with lots of resistance, both because people thought I look down upon his writings, which I don't (because for one thing I've read none of his books, only his public contributions and second I applaud his advertised original approach) and because they overestimate the understanding of a 5 dan. I stated the provocative "to the eyes of a 9p, the difference between a 7 kyu or a 5 dan are negligible: they roughly make the same kind of blunders".
I stand behind that blunt statement. As Barry Mazur's suggested in the field of mathematics, or any field, at some point in the professional life, one experiences a paradigm shift that sees all acquired knowledge in a new light. With the old eastern image, the tree and the leave become one.
Does this mean only 9p's can teach or write? Certainly not. Amateurs like RJ, myself and the rest of you must cautiously and studiously expand the proverbial Sensei's Library because the pros will not do it and definitely not for free. When new players arrive at the club, there is none but ourselves to train them. But when RJ suggests that kyu players study his games, that is a bridge too far. There are thousands of pro games in the public domain and those should be studied.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Yes. And I'm sure Einstein will have made calculation errors in at least one of his papers.tchan001 wrote:At least one 9p pro has lost by self atari. Probably should have looked at that branch more carefully before heuristically pruning it so early with his deep understanding.
It's funny how in one argument the level of professionals is purely explained by reading strength, hence deep understanding cannot be the matter, and in the next argument poor reading shows that deep understanding does not distinguish the pros.
It occurs to me you have taken on the defence of RJ against a challenge I do not even make, and have decided to sacrifice logic for the cause.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Knotwilg, my person etc. are off-topic in this thread.
You interpret me wrongly if you think that I would have said that the level of professionals was purely explained by reading strength. I have said that it belongs to those aspects where top professionals are clearly stronger than amateurs and that that is not a hidden kind of skill.
Everybody has paradigm shifts during his go career.
You interpret me wrongly if you think that I would have said that the level of professionals was purely explained by reading strength. I have said that it belongs to those aspects where top professionals are clearly stronger than amateurs and that that is not a hidden kind of skill.
Everybody has paradigm shifts during his go career.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
Lee Sedol's book of his commented games is a great way to get inside the head of a top pro and how he understands the game.
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Re: Understanding of Top Level Professionals
That was of course more due to last second byoyomi making him miss the spot he intended while trying to read other branches...tchan001 wrote:At least one 9p pro has lost by self atari. Probably should have looked at that branch more carefully before heuristically pruning it so early with his deep understanding.