Joelnelsonb wrote:So I've been toying with this idea for a long time but now I'm becoming pretty adamant about it. I feel like anytime I win a game by more than 1 moku, I actually should count it down as a loss simply because my play was clearly inferior. Not inferior to my opponents, inferior to Christ's. I picture Jesus playing Go and as the ultimate player (given that he did invent the game and everything) I strive to play just like him. I don't believe that Jesus would ever beat someone by more than a 1 point moku. Jesus understands that beating your opponent by more than this means that you overplayed and would've been bested if playing against a stronger player. I strive to always play like water. This means to always take the path of least resistance and to always be flexible. Water is actually invincible. You can't destroy it. No matter what you do to it, it just adapts to it's environment, changes forms if need be and continues on. As in Go, the player with the most flexible plan will always win. You need to control 181 points of the board to win without komi and from now on, every game I play, my goal will be just that: to control 181 points, no more no less. Anything else is a loss in my book.
About Physics:You make some remarks about physics which are simply not true. "Water is invincible. You can't destroy it." You can destroy water (or split it into Hydrogen and Oxygen) via a process called "electrolysis" - kids learn about it and do it in grade schools these days, I think. Time will always "overcome" water, which constantly evaporates in almost any environment.
I think I get what you say about water adapting to its environment, but so does any fluid or gas, and even most solid matter if you wait long enough and shake it a little - so there is really nothing that special about water or the concept itself.
About Religion: (Am I breaking the forum rules here? Possibly... Please skip if you don't have an open mind.)
You also make quite a number of definitive remarks about somebody named Jesus. Is he a Go player as well? What is his Go level? Does he post here? What do you base your belief that Jesus would not win by more than one point in any game? If you talk about THAT Jesus (and I am not sure, there are some mexican kids running around here named "Jesus", so one can never take things for granted) - I would still like to know what you base your assumption on.
Theologically, one could as well make a point that Jesus would never win at all, but always "turn the other cheek" in Go terms and let his opponent win. What would Jesus need with a Go win? Its not like He needs more rating points...
Or one could make a point that He would take after His father - you know, THE God - who has a history of doing some really bad things to people who oppose Him. The flood, cities of the plain, etc.
But most likely, THE Jesus is much too busy and has much better things to do, or so I hope. Listening to all the prayers 24/7 must be a full-time job many times over, not to mention about actually answering some of them...
I don't want to believe that He ignores all these prayers because he would rather play games...
About Go:Flexible plans are nice - you might have a point here, but its only a part of the whole picture. Given two plans of equal value, the more flexible one is probably better. But you can have flexible plans which are simple bad, and they tend to lost to less flexible but better plans almost every time. Not to mention that plan is one thing, and the skill to execute it is another.
Winning by 1 point is sweet - but at DDK level it is a lottery, and not really any measure of skill, plan validity, religious devotion, or anything else.
Why I say all this:Not to be mean or offend anybody. It just seems to me that to get better in Go, as in any other field I can think of, personal honesty is pretty important. And personal honesty assumes you take a critical and very realistic look at your own actions and beliefs. This, at times, can be cruel and painful, but it is a necessary step.
Take your idea about holding back when the opponent makes a mistake... It might be noble or it might be dumb, I am not judging, but one thing I know: To get better, to really get to the point that you can actually afford to play like that and lead games down such with conviction, you need to spend many years beating the cr*p out of other players - simply to learn the necessary skills to become that good.
Consider, for example, that when you fail to kill a group which your opponent just allowed you to kill, you might not learn how he would try to desperately save it, and you will never get a chance to make mistakes and allow him to save it, and thus you will never learn from those mistakes and get stronger. You will stagnate.
Does THE Jesus really want to to stagnate?
I could go on, but I think you get the picture.
A highly confusing and misguided post, I'd say.