Yeah, I've got no problem separating these two things.Joelnelsonb wrote:You must bifurcate the scoring method used from the actual rules of game play.
Two of these are right. Obviously its the third that we disagree on...Joelnelsonb wrote: You can play the same game of Go that you know and love simply by stating three things: The liberty rule(s), the ko rule and the basic objective of capture the most stones to win so long as you mention that passing is illegal.
Ok, I think I see what's going on here... I think you're confusing strategy (method) with objective (goal).Joelnelsonb wrote: What your suggesting is true: that many, many strong players have throughout the ages demonstrated that the most effective way to build a stronger position than your opponent is to place emphesis on un-played areas of the board in attempt to make use of them later.... But I'm still not convinced. I often have games, depending on how my opponent plays, where I don't make a single move with the intention of making territory directly. Rather, my moves are aimed at challenging the infrastructure being developed by my opponent and granting limited mobility. You can't tell me this is a "inferior" way to think ...[(unintended) insult deleted].
These aren't the same at all. You can aim at attacking without trying to take territory, as a strategy, but that doesn't change the overall goal (objective), of trying to control a larger sphere of influence on the board.
I think your suggested strategy is a perfectly fine one. Its just not the main objective of the game.
the scoring method has no bearing on whether or not surrounded stones should be played out to capture or not.Joelnelsonb wrote: (during that period that never gets played out because of the scoring method used which allows players to agree on the result long before the game has ended)