What's wrong with suicide?
- Jordus
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
Suicide is just a bad move (i.e. the name suicide....), because you can not benefit whatsoever from it. In fact you are hurt by it. You give your opponent an extra point, and it is their move.
I'm thinking...
- oren
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
There is a possibility you can use it as a ko threat. There are also times when you may consider doing it for extra time if it makes an answer required.Jordus wrote:Suicide is just a bad move (i.e. the name suicide....), because you can not benefit whatsoever from it. In fact you are hurt by it. You give your opponent an extra point, and it is their move.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
How can it be used as a ko threat? Using Araban's diagram:oren wrote:There is a possibility you can use it as a ko threat. There are also times when you may consider doing it for extra time if it makes an answer required.Jordus wrote:Suicide is just a bad move (i.e. the name suicide....), because you can not benefit whatsoever from it. In fact you are hurt by it. You give your opponent an extra point, and it is their move.
if white plays suicide, all three stones are now gone and its black turn. black plays
*edit* unless..... you were talking about it as a threat in order to take another ko on the board.... hmmmmmm
I'm thinking...
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amnal
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
Remember, a ko threat is a move which your opponent answers. Since black answered (in order to keep his two eyes), that *was* a ko threat. Ko threat = 1.Jordus wrote:How can it be used as a ko threat? Using Araban's diagram:oren wrote:There is a possibility you can use it as a ko threat. There are also times when you may consider doing it for extra time if it makes an answer required.Jordus wrote:Suicide is just a bad move (i.e. the name suicide....), because you can not benefit whatsoever from it. In fact you are hurt by it. You give your opponent an extra point, and it is their move.
if white plays suicide, all three stones are now gone and its black turn. black plays. Now white is in the position as before. Ko threat = 0.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
Jordus wrote:oren wrote:Jordus wrote:
*edit* unless..... you were talking about it as a threat in order to take another ko on the board.... hmmmmmm
Good thing its against the rules then.....amnal wrote:Remember, a ko threat is a move which your opponent answers. Since black answered (in order to keep his two eyes), that *was* a ko threat. Ko threat = 1.
*edit* My bad... quote#2 was from amnal not oren... sorry amnal.....
I'm thinking...
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
I agree with DrStraw. Suicide is logically impossible because a group can't have zero liberties. It's that simple.Harleqin wrote:No, the obvious consequence is that if you play a stone which has no liberties, it is removed. Suicide is thus logically possible.DrStraw wrote:There is a rule which says that stones cannot be on the board if they have no liberties. An obvious consequence of this is that you cannot make a move which results in no liberties. Suicide is logically not possible.
A play is
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any, then
- removing all own stones that now still have no liberties, if any.
Your description of what a play is doesn't describe Go the way it is normally played (though it does sound a lot like New Zealand rules).
The way Go is usually played is actually more simple. A play is
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
You forgot the third step when suicide is forbidden: backtracking. A play then ispalapiku wrote:I agree with DrStraw. Suicide is logically impossible because a group can't have zero liberties. It's that simple.Harleqin wrote:No, the obvious consequence is that if you play a stone which has no liberties, it is removed. Suicide is thus logically possible.DrStraw wrote:There is a rule which says that stones cannot be on the board if they have no liberties. An obvious consequence of this is that you cannot make a move which results in no liberties. Suicide is logically not possible.
A play is
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any, then
- removing all own stones that now still have no liberties, if any.
Your description of what a play is doesn't describe Go the way it is normally played (though it does sound a lot like New Zealand rules).
The way Go is usually played is actually more simple. A play is
"Removing all own stones" is not a step in the traditional game of Go. It is something New Zealand rules introduced for the sake of being cute and simple. It is a clever trick, and I admire its cleverness. But I don't like it. It reminds me of those mathematical proofs where instead of doing three obvious steps you do one step which makes no sense, yet, by magic, everything simplifies and the problem is solved. Such proofs are cute but not helpful.
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any.
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any, but
- not allowed if there would now be any own stones that have no liberties (you have to choose a different intersection initially).
A good system naturally covers all corner cases without further effort.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
There's no "backtracking" because that's actually the zeroth step - you verify the legality of your move before you make it. Verifying that a move is legal before making it is a natural part of the game (allowing suicide doesn't get rid of this step). Taking off your own stones is not. You'd have to stretch across the whole board to drop them into the opponent's lid!
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DrStraw
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
When you remove the opponent's stone you gain them as captured stones, which count in your favor at the end of the game. If you remove your own stones what happens to them? You are the one who removed them not the opponent. So you have two options:Harleqin wrote:No, the obvious consequence is that if you play a stone which has no liberties, it is removed. Suicide is thus logically possible.DrStraw wrote:There is a rule which says that stones cannot be on the board if they have no liberties. An obvious consequence of this is that you cannot make a move which results in no liberties. Suicide is logically not possible.
A play is
- placing a stone on an empty intersection, then
- removing all opposing stones that have no liberties, if any, then
- removing all own stones that now still have no liberties, if any.
1) Stones with no liberties are removed, sometimes going to the person doing the removing and at other times going to the opponent of the one doing the removing.
2) Stones with no liberties are removed, sometimes being removed by the person making the move and at other times by the opponent of the one making the move.
Neither option is elegant. Go is all about elegance. Inelegant rules such as these have no place.
Still officially AGA 5d but I play so irregularly these days that I am probably only 3d or 4d over the board (but hopefully still 5d in terms of knowledge, theory and the ability to contribute).
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
Which lid I put the stones in should really make no difference in "elegance". Besides, suicide is in all but very rare situations just a bad move, so in the event of a player playing such a move, unusual motions are appropriate.
I think that forbidding suicide is just a needless restriction, even if most of the time that restriction only prevents bad moves.
I think that forbidding suicide is just a needless restriction, even if most of the time that restriction only prevents bad moves.
A good system naturally covers all corner cases without further effort.
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amnal
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
Elegance is a rather subjective term, I can completely understand people considering suicide inelegant. I suppose I consider it that way myself.Harleqin wrote:Which lid I put the stones in should really make no difference in "elegance". Besides, suicide is in all but very rare situations just a bad move, so in the event of a player playing such a move, unusual motions are appropriate.
I think that forbidding suicide is just a needless restriction, even if most of the time that restriction only prevents bad moves.
I'm well aware that there are perfectly good rulesets allowing suicide, but its forbidding is not a 'needless restriction' to me. Since there is no obvious reason to allow or disallow it (other than perhaps this subjective 'elegance' which I agree with), it's just a choice whether to allow it or not. A set of rules to allow a player to capture his own stones is a needless addition just as much as disallowing this act is a needless restriction. But you have to choose one, as a necessary clarification.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
If we come from a different way, the two choices present themselves like this:
Axiom: There can never be stones without liberties on the board.
No suicide: If a play of one player causes stones of the opposing player to be without liberty, those stones are removed. If a play of one player would cause only own stones to be without liberty, that move is illegal.
Suicide: If a play causes stones to be without liberty, they are removed. Removing opposing stones takes precedence.
Axiom: There can never be stones without liberties on the board.
No suicide: If a play of one player causes stones of the opposing player to be without liberty, those stones are removed. If a play of one player would cause only own stones to be without liberty, that move is illegal.
Suicide: If a play causes stones to be without liberty, they are removed. Removing opposing stones takes precedence.
A good system naturally covers all corner cases without further effort.
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Bill Spight
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
How about this?Harleqin wrote:If we come from a different way, the two choices present themselves like this:
Axiom: There can never be stones without liberties on the board.
No suicide: If a play of one player causes stones of the opposing player to be without liberty, those stones are removed. If a play of one player would cause only own stones to be without liberty, that move is illegal.
Suicide: If a play causes stones to be without liberty, they are removed. Removing opposing stones takes precedence.
Axiom: After a play there can never be a stone without a liberty on the board.
No suicide: If placing a stone on a point causes an opposing stone to have no liberty, all such stones are removed.
Suicide: If placing as stone on a point causes a stone to have no liberty, all such opposing stones are removed. After that, all stones without a liberty are removed.
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I think that rules that allow suicide are more complex than rules that do not.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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Re: What's wrong with suicide?
This is a fascinating debate (and a civil one at that).
I think both sides have some good points, and I'd really like to see a group of professionals (say 5-9) from different countries opine.
I think both sides have some good points, and I'd really like to see a group of professionals (say 5-9) from different countries opine.