Doing work
- jts
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Doing work
A propros a discussion that seems to have popped up among the SL folk;
働く or 働きis how the Japanese refer to how a stone works, what work it does; from the example on that page, which I think Bill Spight added, it seems that work is very similar to meaning. That is, the meaning of a stone or the work it does can be assessed by looking at the follow-up sequences that can develop out of the initial stone.
However, SL also has an entry for efficiency. What is the difference between work and efficiency? Well, it seems the latter is being translated out of Chinese (效率) and Korean (효율), and the SL page doesn't list a Japanese translation. So is this simply yet another case where we have doubled a CJK concept by translating it now this way, now that way? Or is there an important strategic difference? I find it hard to believe that we will find an example where the stone that does the most work is not also the most efficient, or vice-versa.
働く or 働きis how the Japanese refer to how a stone works, what work it does; from the example on that page, which I think Bill Spight added, it seems that work is very similar to meaning. That is, the meaning of a stone or the work it does can be assessed by looking at the follow-up sequences that can develop out of the initial stone.
However, SL also has an entry for efficiency. What is the difference between work and efficiency? Well, it seems the latter is being translated out of Chinese (效率) and Korean (효율), and the SL page doesn't list a Japanese translation. So is this simply yet another case where we have doubled a CJK concept by translating it now this way, now that way? Or is there an important strategic difference? I find it hard to believe that we will find an example where the stone that does the most work is not also the most efficient, or vice-versa.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Doing work
Efficiency has a tendency of being considered as a local concept, while best use looks for the global context. If you change the scale of context (and so the study object), different qualities of work can occur. E.g., a locally bad shape move (inefficient) can be a best use move (maximal work) if it minimises the number of sufficiently big ko threats related to an active or expected ko fight.
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Re: Doing work
Robert, it sounds like you are talking about the technical vocabulary of your own approach to Go. I was more interested in how CJK professionals and authors talk/think/write/teach/strategize about the game.
As a matter of personal preference, I would reserve the terms pretty/ugly for the distinction you are trying to make. "This shape is ugly, but here it is the only move that works" or "...but here it is efficient," makes perfect sense; on the other hand "This shape is inefficient, but here it reaches a maximum of global effectiveness" introduces a completely unnecessary sense of paradox.
As a matter of personal preference, I would reserve the terms pretty/ugly for the distinction you are trying to make. "This shape is ugly, but here it is the only move that works" or "...but here it is efficient," makes perfect sense; on the other hand "This shape is inefficient, but here it reaches a maximum of global effectiveness" introduces a completely unnecessary sense of paradox.
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Splatted
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Re: Doing work
The fact that they occur together doesn't mean that they are the same thing. I'd say that looking at how much work a stone is doing is a good way of telling if it is efficient.
Edit: To answer your question a little better:
Work = What a stone does. The actual direct effect that playing there has on the game.
Efficiency = An assesment of the stones effectiveness. I.e. the result of passing judgement on the work that it does.
Edit: To answer your question a little better:
Work = What a stone does. The actual direct effect that playing there has on the game.
Efficiency = An assesment of the stones effectiveness. I.e. the result of passing judgement on the work that it does.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Doing work
jts, I read whatever about related go terms was available to me from whichever sources. Many sources, but sparse information. To make more sense of it, I have added my own insight. More sources might add more information. Altogether, information on work-related concepts is still sparse.
From my POV, my own additions include:
- best use
- space scale in its general sense applicable to any subboard
- time scale in its general sense applicable to any duration of a part of the game sequence (or a variation)
- numerical assessement of efficiency as a ratio points per stones and of mobility, usefulness, influence stones as differences for Black and White
- contributions to descriptions of efficiency and haengma
If, for the sake of argument, I remove these additions from my own understanding, then my work-related knowledge drops from 5d-with-potential-for-6d-understanding to weak 3d-level: I would be understanding little more than that efficiency is somehow related to a) a group moving out faster or more slowly with worse or better connection and b) avoiding overconcentration (still without knowing exactly what that is).
Now, go ahead, explore more sources (or only CJK sources, if you prefer), and find out afresh more understanding of work-related concepts. Please tell us, so that I get my chance to reach 5d+ understanding again:) But... you sound sceptical about my additions. Why? Wouldn't it be better for you to add anthing you find to all the existing understanding? I, for my part, prefer to continue from 5d+ understanding than to go back to 3d and start again.
In particular, what is the purpose of stones doing work if one may not think about their best use?
From my POV, my own additions include:
- best use
- space scale in its general sense applicable to any subboard
- time scale in its general sense applicable to any duration of a part of the game sequence (or a variation)
- numerical assessement of efficiency as a ratio points per stones and of mobility, usefulness, influence stones as differences for Black and White
- contributions to descriptions of efficiency and haengma
If, for the sake of argument, I remove these additions from my own understanding, then my work-related knowledge drops from 5d-with-potential-for-6d-understanding to weak 3d-level: I would be understanding little more than that efficiency is somehow related to a) a group moving out faster or more slowly with worse or better connection and b) avoiding overconcentration (still without knowing exactly what that is).
Now, go ahead, explore more sources (or only CJK sources, if you prefer), and find out afresh more understanding of work-related concepts. Please tell us, so that I get my chance to reach 5d+ understanding again:) But... you sound sceptical about my additions. Why? Wouldn't it be better for you to add anthing you find to all the existing understanding? I, for my part, prefer to continue from 5d+ understanding than to go back to 3d and start again.
In particular, what is the purpose of stones doing work if one may not think about their best use?
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gowan
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Re: Doing work
The Japanese word hataraku, which is often translated as "to work" really means more like "be effective". While we might say that one move is more effective than another, I doubt that we could say in many board situations what the most effective (= best?) move is. There is a connection with "efficient" but it isn't quantifiable. A move which creates an overconcentrated shape might be doing some work (having some effect) because it enlarges territory (by a small amount), say, but it might not be efficient.
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Bill Spight
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Re: Doing work
The Japanese term is 能率 (nouritsu). I have added it to the SL page.jts wrote:A propros a discussion that seems to have popped up among the SL folk;
働く or 働きis how the Japanese refer to how a stone works, what work it does; from the example on that page, which I think Bill Spight added, it seems that work is very similar to meaning. That is, the meaning of a stone or the work it does can be assessed by looking at the follow-up sequences that can develop out of the initial stone.
However, SL also has an entry for efficiency. What is the difference between work and efficiency? Well, it seems the latter is being translated out of Chinese (效率) and Korean (효율), and the SL page doesn't list a Japanese translation. So is this simply yet another case where we have doubled a CJK concept by translating it now this way, now that way?
I had not particularly thought about it, but I suppose that it is like the difference between efficiency and effectiveness in English. And it may be just me, but I think that I am much more likely to talk about shape in terms of efficiency than work. The same goes for haengma, even though it is not a Japanese concept.Or is there an important strategic difference? I find it hard to believe that we will find an example where the stone that does the most work is not also the most efficient, or vice-versa.
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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SmoothOper
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Re: Doing work
Pragmatists vs. the Utilitarians part II
Something that works may serve no useful purpose.
Something that works may serve no useful purpose.
- jts
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Re: Doing work
Thanks, Bill. That was the sort of concrete information I was looking for. Now I'm just curious as to whether there are more precise C/K terms for effect/effective/effectiveness...
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Re: Doing work
Isn't kouritsu (効率) more commonly used in Japanese? I am not sure that I have ever noticed nouritsu used in Go but I haven't time to hunt around for an example right at the moment.Bill Spight wrote:The Japanese term is 能率 (nouritsu). I have added it to the SL page.jts wrote:A propros a discussion that seems to have popped up among the SL folk;
働く or 働きis how the Japanese refer to how a stone works, what work it does; from the example on that page, which I think Bill Spight added, it seems that work is very similar to meaning. That is, the meaning of a stone or the work it does can be assessed by looking at the follow-up sequences that can develop out of the initial stone.
However, SL also has an entry for efficiency. What is the difference between work and efficiency? Well, it seems the latter is being translated out of Chinese (效率) and Korean (효율), and the SL page doesn't list a Japanese translation. So is this simply yet another case where we have doubled a CJK concept by translating it now this way, now that way?
I had not particularly thought about it, but I suppose that it is like the difference between efficiency and effectiveness in English. And it may be just me, but I think that I am much more likely to talk about shape in terms of efficiency than work. The same goes for haengma, even though it is not a Japanese concept.Or is there an important strategic difference? I find it hard to believe that we will find an example where the stone that does the most work is not also the most efficient, or vice-versa.
Edit: How about this video (no time to watch it myself
Dave Sigaty
"Short-lived are both the praiser and the praised, and rememberer and the remembered..."
- Marcus Aurelius; Meditations, VIII 21
"Short-lived are both the praiser and the praised, and rememberer and the remembered..."
- Marcus Aurelius; Meditations, VIII 21
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Bill Spight
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Re: Doing work
I got 能率 from Takagawa. Maybe 効率 is more common.ez4u wrote:Isn't kouritsu (効率) more commonly used in Japanese? I am not sure that I have ever noticed nouritsu used in Go but I haven't time to hunt around for an example right at the moment.Bill Spight wrote:The Japanese term is 能率 (nouritsu). I have added it to the SL page.jts wrote:A propros a discussion that seems to have popped up among the SL folk;
働く or 働きis how the Japanese refer to how a stone works, what work it does; from the example on that page, which I think Bill Spight added, it seems that work is very similar to meaning. That is, the meaning of a stone or the work it does can be assessed by looking at the follow-up sequences that can develop out of the initial stone.
However, SL also has an entry for efficiency. What is the difference between work and efficiency? Well, it seems the latter is being translated out of Chinese (效率) and Korean (효율), and the SL page doesn't list a Japanese translation. So is this simply yet another case where we have doubled a CJK concept by translating it now this way, now that way?
I had not particularly thought about it, but I suppose that it is like the difference between efficiency and effectiveness in English. And it may be just me, but I think that I am much more likely to talk about shape in terms of efficiency than work. The same goes for haengma, even though it is not a Japanese concept.Or is there an important strategic difference? I find it hard to believe that we will find an example where the stone that does the most work is not also the most efficient, or vice-versa.
Edit: How about this video (no time to watch it myself)?
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.
- oren
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Re: Doing work
Good example use of 効率
http://www.yasashiigo.com/rules/rule_3/3_3.html
効率よい地の囲い方
Wiki page for 囲碁 does use 能率 which was also a term I didn't see very often before
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%BD%A2_ ... %E7%A2%81)
またこれと逆に、石の働きが重複して能率が悪い形などを「悪形」「愚形」などと表現する。
Added bonus for 働き example.
http://www.yasashiigo.com/rules/rule_3/3_3.html
効率よい地の囲い方
Wiki page for 囲碁 does use 能率 which was also a term I didn't see very often before
http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%BD%A2_ ... %E7%A2%81)
またこれと逆に、石の働きが重複して能率が悪い形などを「悪形」「愚形」などと表現する。
Added bonus for 働き example.
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Kirby
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Re: Doing work
If you want the SL translation to match between Korean and Japanese, use 效率 because these are the same chinese characters (or change the Korean translation).
能率 can also be translated as "efficiency", but I feel it has a different nuance. 效 has the nuance of a result or effectiveness, so the feeling seems directly related to "efficiency" (rate of effectiveness, maybe). 能, on the other hand, has to do with ability or skill, so there feels like a different nuance.
A question comparing the two can be seen here: http://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa ... q117572116
The person asks what the difference between the two are. The person that answers gives an explanation, which concludes with:
So in my opinion, if you just want to say something is "effective" without much else, I'd use 効率. I'd guess (because I haven't heard it used in go, as opposed to 効率, which I have heard) you'd use 能率 if you wanted to say something like, "Iyama Yuta really studies go efficiently".
I think the important distinction is: The proportion of effort to result vs. What can be done in any given fixed time.
能率 can also be translated as "efficiency", but I feel it has a different nuance. 效 has the nuance of a result or effectiveness, so the feeling seems directly related to "efficiency" (rate of effectiveness, maybe). 能, on the other hand, has to do with ability or skill, so there feels like a different nuance.
A question comparing the two can be seen here: http://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa ... q117572116
The person asks what the difference between the two are. The person that answers gives an explanation, which concludes with:
My crappy translation is as follows:「効率」は作業する人間・機械などの、仕事量と消費されたエネルギーとの比率で、
使った労力に対する、得られた成果の割合で
株などのの投資にも「効率」が使われます。
「能率」は一定時間内にできる仕事のはかどり方をあらわすようです。
主に人間の日頃の仕事ぶりに使われますね
For things like:
*The proportion of expended energy and work by (working) people, machines, etc.
*The ratio of obtained results with regards to the amount of used labor
*Stocks and other types of investments
You can use "効率".
能率 is showing the way of progressing the amount of work that can be done within a fixed time. Mainly, it's used for the way a person habitually works.
So in my opinion, if you just want to say something is "effective" without much else, I'd use 効率. I'd guess (because I haven't heard it used in go, as opposed to 効率, which I have heard) you'd use 能率 if you wanted to say something like, "Iyama Yuta really studies go efficiently".
I think the important distinction is: The proportion of effort to result vs. What can be done in any given fixed time.
be immersed
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Doing work
What does "effective" as a go term(?) express at all? That a move does what it shall do? I.e., is it the same as "fulfilling aims"?
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Kirby
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Re: Doing work
The more I read online, the more I think that there are many cases where these two can be used interchangeably.
For example, in a snippet from Oren's page: "能率が悪い形"
In English, I think you can say simply that the shape is not efficient. And I think that it'd be acceptable both to say, "能率が悪い形" as well as to say "効率が悪い形", and indeed, you can find examples of both phrases with a Google search.
Coming back to the distinction from earlier, I think you could say for a given position in go, "this shape is not efficient" because:
a.) The amount that you expended to get that position was not worth what was obtained (効率)
b.) The amount that was able to be obtained in a fixed period of time for this player was not good (能率).
Practically speaking, in both cases, it's just... inefficient
For example, in a snippet from Oren's page: "能率が悪い形"
In English, I think you can say simply that the shape is not efficient. And I think that it'd be acceptable both to say, "能率が悪い形" as well as to say "効率が悪い形", and indeed, you can find examples of both phrases with a Google search.
Coming back to the distinction from earlier, I think you could say for a given position in go, "this shape is not efficient" because:
a.) The amount that you expended to get that position was not worth what was obtained (効率)
b.) The amount that was able to be obtained in a fixed period of time for this player was not good (能率).
Practically speaking, in both cases, it's just... inefficient
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