About Go Rules in Korea
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RobertJasiek
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
That's because they use uranium and plutonium in their rules. The "uranium" is the difficult to grasp, but already explained by foreigners stuff (such as definition of life and locally). The "plutonium" is the even more difficult to grasp, not yet explained stuff (such as "ko threat", where a trivial "play in between ko captures" would not be good enough explanation).
- HermanHiddema
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
hyperpape wrote:It almost feels like you're being deliberately obtuse. I get that there might be a way to misread Robert's comment in a way that's obnoxious, but it didn't even momentarily occur to me (in spite of Robert's tendency to make claims I find grandiose), and I don't think it's the most ordinary reading.
Yes, I am being deliberately obtuse, because experience teaches that it is not a good idea to just assume Robert means anything else than a strict literal reading of what he writes. So I just assume nothing and ask for clarification.
Anyway, in my opinion it is good to clear up what Robert meant, because his comment already caused offense to at least one Korean player.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
Concerning the mentioned many millions of Korean players, I wonder whether they all or least a few of them cry and complain about apparently the professionals' 20 kyu mistake to let the Korean rules contradict basic go theory and identify nakade stones as dead, because they are removable.
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MJK
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
RobertJasiek wrote:Concerning the mentioned many millions of Korean players, I wonder whether they all or least a few of them cry and complain about apparently the professionals' 20 kyu mistake to let the Korean rules contradict basic go theory and identify nakade stones as dead, because they are removable.
What the problem with the quoted diagram?
Simply black is dead; any pro must agree.
I don't know if the current Korean rules say the white stones are also dead. However, it doesn't matter at all to the result, I mean the scoring.
Wait, please.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
The rules imply that also the marked white stones are dead (and this is the mistake).
WRT to scoring, usually a generous interpretation of the rules' territory "definition" can dissolve this problem ("feature instead of bug"). Matters change (and a "feature instead of bug" excuse breaks down) when snapback stones form part of an informally perceived territory boundary, are called dead (because also they are removable), and then - according to application of the rules - there is no proper surrounding by independent live stones. This does matter for scoring, although we can generously set the lower level of that mistake at 10 kyu, because DDKs do not necessarily know what a snapback is:)
Nevertheless, no ruleset should take pride in temporarily calling the white nakade stones "dead". Such is not professional teaching standard, isn't it?
WRT to scoring, usually a generous interpretation of the rules' territory "definition" can dissolve this problem ("feature instead of bug"). Matters change (and a "feature instead of bug" excuse breaks down) when snapback stones form part of an informally perceived territory boundary, are called dead (because also they are removable), and then - according to application of the rules - there is no proper surrounding by independent live stones. This does matter for scoring, although we can generously set the lower level of that mistake at 10 kyu, because DDKs do not necessarily know what a snapback is:)
Nevertheless, no ruleset should take pride in temporarily calling the white nakade stones "dead". Such is not professional teaching standard, isn't it?
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hyperpape
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
I suppose I get what you're doing, but it seemed needlessly confrontational.HermanHiddema wrote:hyperpape wrote:It almost feels like you're being deliberately obtuse. I get that there might be a way to misread Robert's comment in a way that's obnoxious, but it didn't even momentarily occur to me (in spite of Robert's tendency to make claims I find grandiose), and I don't think it's the most ordinary reading.
Yes, I am being deliberately obtuse, because experience teaches that it is not a good idea to just assume Robert means anything else than a strict literal reading of what he writes. So I just assume nothing and ask for clarification.
Anyway, in my opinion it is good to clear up what Robert meant, because his comment already caused offense to at least one Korean player.
- Cassandra
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
RobertJasiek wrote:The rules imply that also the marked white stones are dead (and this is the mistake).
From which part of the rules text do you derive this from ?
I just found a similar diagram to your's with the White Nakade shape inside. But the corresponding text seems to say that the Black stones are dead. There, noting is said about White stones.
The really most difficult Go problem ever: https://igohatsuyoron120.de/index.htm
Igo Hatsuyōron #120 (really solved by KataGo)
Igo Hatsuyōron #120 (really solved by KataGo)
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RobertJasiek
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
Cassandra wrote:From which part of the rules text do you derive this from ?
See the first message of this thread.
I just found a similar diagram to your's with the White Nakade shape inside. But the corresponding text seems to say that the Black stones are dead. There, noting is said about White stones.
Is the diagram for the Korean 1992 Rules (where this aspect was correct, if implied from the related capturable-1 diagrams) instead of for the current Korean rules? Is the text appropriate by saying nothing about white stones?
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
MJK wrote: However, it doesn't matter at all to the result, I mean the scoring.
He is right, isn't he, Robert?
I think I am so I think I am.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: About Go Rules in Korea
cyclops wrote:MJK wrote: However, it doesn't matter at all to the result, I mean the scoring.
He is right, isn't he, Robert?
1) Yes - if by scoring you refer only to the score and not also to the status assessments, and if the nakade problem does not coincide with a related snapback problem.
2) No - if you refer to the snapback problem.
3) No - if you refer to the nakade problem or the snapback problem.
4) Possibly no - for other of the many mistakes in the rules.