Re: Knotwilg's practice
Posted: Fri Jan 20, 2023 11:24 am
You are right about the level to which we articulate concepts while playing: we don't, we rather act according to understanding, which is mostly visual-intuitive but which is fueled by articulated understanding through analysis.dust wrote:It's probably a subject more suited to another forum thread, but I think language has its limits. It's easy to think that if only you have the vocabulary nailed down correctly, and the associated concepts adequately described and understood, that 'you've got the right tools for the job' to play Go - as John put it above.
But playing Go is a different experience for me though. When I'm playing intensely it's mainly a strange kind of non-verbal thinking, some with instinctive and some deliberate considerations. As far as I can tell, when I am playing it's very rarely that I'm translating what I'm doing to a 'verbal level' or language. This might happen more formally after the game when I'm reviewing it.
And when I'm learning from handicap games from AI (and from stronger human players as well), I sense that I'm learning the 'feel' of the game and how to play better without necessarily being able to put it into words.
For me, the connection between language and Go is a lot less obvious than it is for some others.
Let me compare this debate to a hot debate in tennis: the pronation on the serve. There are those, like me, who claim that pronation is a consequence of leading the racket on edge and then going into square on contact with the ball. There are others who claim that pronation is a purposeful action to generate extra power from the "wrist snap" and therefore you have to lead on edge. The debate is not conclusive, at least at the strong amateur level where the youtube debates happen. However, no one is having a different understanding what pronation is, what leading on edge means and what square contact means. No one is debating what split step means or lagging the racket on the forehand or what it means to have the dominant shoulder in front at contact. All those terms are equally well understood and once you understand them you can apply them. Then when you have mastered the technique you don't really articulate it any longer.
This is very different from the debates on thickness or sente, which always get stuck at the conceptual level. We can't apply them, some state, because we're applying the terms wrongly. That makes it very hard to learn.
A similar, perhaps more relevant analogy is table tennis, which is dominated by the Chinese. The Chinese have a much more refined understanding and they apply different techniques than the Europeans. They topspin on the forehand with a straight arm at the start, so that the elbow snaps into contact. European teaching is to keep the elbow stable and only use hip rotation. The debate is there but no one is arguing that hip rotation or straight arm are misunderstood. On the backhand, the Chinese apply leg thrust. My teacher says I should not use leg thrust, just the arm. Again, leg thrust is a well understood concept, the debate is only whether you should do it or not. I believe the CHinese have it right, so my teacher is wrong, but there is no debate on the terms.
I'm not saying my understanding of sente is right and John's is wrong, only that the fact that we are debating the term is preventing us from making progress because we're stuck at the conceptual level, not the executional level. I suspect John agrees on that.