Old laments about too much theory
"Jeremy Spinrad" wrote in message
...
It seems that complaintss about too much theory go very far back, well
into the
romantic era. What is the oldest such complaint known? I found this one in
an
Austrian paper called The Humorist, August 27, 1858. Reporting on the
Morphy-Loewenthal match, with Morphy ahead 7-3-1, the writer claims to be
a
strong chessplayer (just a pawn weaker than Grimm), but that pure chess
has been
replaced with "gray theory". With Bilguer and hundreds of other
chessbooks, you
have to have studied too much in order not to be beaten before tactics
begin! The
writer then praises Morphy for defying this trend with his own sharp moves
(calling him the Wagner of chess); he also says that Hamppe would be a
good
opponent for Morphy.
How far back do you think complaints about book knowledge date to?
Jerry Spinrad
Are there any from the Philidor era?
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