Bantari wrote:jts wrote:So if your question is "Would you enjoy spending lots of time studying, and never learning anything?" I would answer, "No, that would be ridiculously frustrating." But that can't get you to the conclusion that people don't enjoy learning!
Well, let me try to explain, since what you say is not really what I mean. First, some example questions:
1. Would you enjoy studying a joseki if you knew you will never have a chance to play it or anything like it?
It's a little unclear what you have in mind (by definition, joseki occur regularly), but I think I can definitely say yes. One of the things that I enjoy most in studying joseki is understanding the inferior sequences that make the main line a joseki. That's the moment at which I "get" the joseki. If you'll let me use intellect as a verb, it's frequently the lines which I expect to never see in a game that allow me to intellect the joseki. And that's enjoyable.
Two more related points:
Bantari wrote:2. More extreme - would you enjoy studying Go if you knew nobody else in the whole world will ever play it?
I would still enjoy it, but not as much - in the same way I enjoy logic puzzles in general.
Another note:
Bantari wrote:3. Or maybe - would you enjoy studying Go if you knew that you will never win a single game?
Yes. That sounds amazing. Like if I got the collective membership of the Nihon Kiin as my personal Go tutors, on the condition that we only ever played even games? Sign me up.
Yet another note:
Bantari wrote:4. For your own example - Would you enjoy learning a formula if you knew it does not come up on the test and you will never use it?
Yes, of course. This happens all the time, actually - I spend more time studying things that are intellectually stimulating than what I actually expect to show up on a test. This may be a personality quirk of mine, but I think it's quite common, as quirks go, and I wouldn't be surprised if it's especially common among Go players.
Bantari wrote:My point is that for most people, learning is the means to achieve something, not the goal in itself.
Again, it depends who and what. Some people just dislike learning, period. Other people really enjoy it. With most (all?) activities, there are people who just want to know enough to get by, and people who become experts for the sake of expertise. Learning to drive - that's a good candidate for "means to an end". Driving is good for getting places, so learning to drive is good for getting places. Learning to play Go is good for X because playing Go is good for X... can you fill in the blank?
Bantari wrote:For most Go players, learning and studyingisare the means to beating other people.
Ah, okay, X={beating people}. I think I mentioned why this is unlikely in my previous post. It's grossly inconsistent with the way Go players actually behave, what they actually want, what they avoid...
Bantari wrote:They think 'if I study hard and learn enough, i can beat him!' And so they learn and they study, and at the end they hope for the payoff - beating 'him'. If there was no 'him', most of us would not spend much time learning, we would be much weaker, and we would mostly play fun games rather than sweating over Go books.
Are you projecting? I would love to hear the story of the man who inspired you to study Go, and the final showdown in which the padawan became the master. But there has never been a specific person that I've wanted to beat at Go. I fear that here our personal experiences are giving us hugely different views of the psychology of the average Go player.
Self-indulgent reasons to think my personal experience is more widespread:
Bantari wrote:So, what I was trying to say, is that I think that most of us do not really enjoy learning for the sake of learning itself.
All we want is to 'beat the sucker that clobbered us in that game last time' or some variation thereof.
And learning is the price we are willing to pay to get there.
And there is nothing really wrong with that.
I think I understand the conclusion you want to draw just fine. It was your initial argument for it that was too cute for me.
Bantari wrote:But then we go all noble and PC and say 'we enjoy learning'.
Because saying 'we are mad at that guy and want to teach him a lesson and beat him good' would be somehow... cheap.
That's the second time you've called enjoying learning (or claiming to) "PC". What exactly does "PC" mean to you?
I really find it difficult to believe that you've ever studied Go in order to "beat him good".
Bantari wrote:Present company excluded, of course.
I'm not at all immune to desire for victory, revenge, triumph, honor, the respect of others... no need to exclude me, at least. But to think that these are the only principles that motivate anyone to do anything is flat-out wrong; and I find it unlikely that these (and especially the first three) motivate people to study Go, in particular.