Bill Spight wrote:... the illogical ruling that White (Segoe) won but Black (Takahashi) did not lose. But the Japanese did not know whether a move was obligatory or not.jann wrote:Has capture / no-pass (= obligatory move, not simple lack of passes) rules ever appeared in practice before recently?
My understanding is that the question was debated at that time. It was not just that Takahashi refused to capture the ko stone and fill the ko, as the referee, Iwasa Kei, directed him to do. The Igo Club web page I linked to on the SL page has disappeared, and I have no access to the writings at that time.jann wrote:These are what I meant by simple lack of passes, in these cases nobody claimed that to keep moving until no more legal moves exist (inside territory) would be obligatory.
OC, 10,000 year kos are not that uncommon. The practice if the ko was not fought to the end was as Iwasa said, for the player who could safely take and fill the ko to do so at the end of play. There were no written rules.The sensei's page for stone scoring etc mention them, but it's unclear how much credibility is behind. I MAY have come across this one other source as well, but don't remember where.What virtual moves? I know of no text that talks of virtual moves.
But a last ko with no dame and no threats is something that likely came up somewhere in history, so one could at least expect a hint from some old sources?
If an unfilled ko remained after all the dame were filled, there was no agreement about what to do. As I understand it, both Shusai and Go Seigen favored leaving the ko unfilled and counting the empty point as territory. Kubomatsu, who was Takahashi's team captain, disagreed, and thought that the ko should be filled. The disagreement between Kubomatsu and Shusai may have played a role in the politics of the Segoe-Takahashi dispute. It may have kept the Nihon Kiin from approving a written set of rules until after Shusai died. In those rules making a play was considered a right, not an obligation. Except, OC, the obligation to fill a ko at the end of play.