I've played GO before. [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif[/img]
and while I was writing this I kept remembering the fascinating shape of the GO pieces. It is fun.
And saying that it makes chess look like tiddlywinks is just about the way I would have said it too [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_wink.gif[/img] .
I can see what you mean about 4a and 4b . Between the two I do like 4a better also but it's hard to give words why (and here I can see why you attribute some of this to intuition). I have tried to force the images to fit what I was trying to define. I mean, the contrast in positive and negative space between 4a to 4b is more pronounced in 4b. .. . ahhh i see what it was.
Ok the contrast in positive and negative space in 4a vs 4b is present in both . . . actually the reason I thought 4b should be better was because the positive and negative space shared half of the canvas diagonally. Meaning, if I drew a line from one corner to it's diagonal corner, 99% of the positive space is in one half. In my head, I thought that should be better. It sounds tidier.
But maybe (and here I'm just musing ) you have left us a clue in your 2nd discussion on observation and composition under fishes. When you talked about the rule of 1/3 . When I go back and look at 4a again I can see that if I draw 3 diagonal lines to divide it into 1/3s that way. . .no that's forcing it too (we'd have to toss out the little rebellious go piece in the bottom left part, to make it fit 2/3 . It really seems like 1/4 negative space, 3/4 positive space.
*******
Ok let me drop that for a moment. Looks like I'll have to agree with you. There does seem to be two elements: the learned and the instinctive/intuitive.
I think your write up on observation is an essential step in an indidual's quest to find good composition.
When you mentioned that the GO master would say, it "feels right" odds are there are so many factors and moves and counter moves to be weighed, and each game of GO is unique (you can't write a GO game down like you can a chess game) with so many variables it would be hard to explain. It IS hard to explain [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif[/img] . Many of the good, solid GO decisions have become second nature to him. And second nature IS hard to explain. Each person picks up their individual patterns. So what makes sense to me may be incomprehensible to another.
And maybe it should be left unexplained because once we have a definition then programmers will try to fix that definition on a pin and make a computer that follows the definition. I can't help but think of BIG BLUE vs Kasparov . . .
I imagine we could say that each person has to learn it on their own. There aren't 20 steps to understanding composition. But as you pointed out, (in your post way down deep in the bowels of the fishes thread) good observation skills can be learned.
Thank you so much for pointing these things out.
It HAS to be something to do with the patterns we see. It's neat to know that you are familiar with GO too. [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif[/img]
Cheers,
Athena
[img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_smile.gif[/img]
[This message was edited by T. Athena Hatton on July 03, 2001 at 16:39.]
Athena
Our thoughts are bounded by words. The quality of those thoughts is largely determined by the words that compose them.
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