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#111
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On Nov 7, 4:28 pm, "J.D. Walker" wrote:
Taylor Kingston wrote: ... I'd venture a guess that a search through Shakespeare's works would yield a large number of choice insults dressed in flowery prose. Yes, and a search through Fort Knox would yield many gold ingots, while a search through a cow pasture would yield much manure. snip I volunteer for the search of Fort Knox! Perhaps along the way I can locate all the missing funds from the USCF. But who will undertake the search in the cow pasture? :^) Don't expect to find very much gold left. The USA stopped backing the dollar with gold a long time ago, replacing the precious metal with fluffery -- much like Mr. Parr. Since there need be nothing whatsoever to back it, the printing presses are red-hot; and like other fabrications, paper dollars will ultimately be seen for what they really are. Now for the good news: because there is no need to back it up, both Uncle Sam and Larry Parr can produce all the fluffery they want, at practically zero cost! As for integrity -- who needs it? And as for inflation numbers, they can be (and already have been) quite easily doctored. -- help bot |
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#112
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SBD wrote:
On Nov 7, 2:12 pm, "J.D. Walker" wrote: However, I'd venture a guess that a search through Shakespeare's works would yield a large number of choice insults dressed in flowery prose. Shakespeare was a scholar? ![]() Nice point, though Rev. Please continue to post here. Ah well, things are quiet in here at the moment and curiosity once again got the best of me. I went looking for Shakespearean insults. I found an Internet insult generator based on the Great Bard's works: http://www.pangloss.com/seidel/Shaker/ Perhaps some of these will inspire us to greater literary heights when we feel the irrepressible need to pour a chamber pot of vitriol on an agitated opponent... 1) Thou clay-brained guts, thou knotty-pated fool, thou whoreson obscene greasy tallow-catch! 2) What trick, what device, what starting-hole canst thou now find out, to hide thee from this open and apparent shame? (Taken from: Henry IV, part I) 3) [Thou] leathern-jerkin, crystal-button, knot-pated, agatering, puke-stocking, caddis-garter, smooth-tongue, Spanish pouch! (Taken from: Henry IV, part I) 4) Methink'st thou art a general offence and every man should beat thee. (Taken from: All's Well That Ends Well) 5) [Thou] poisonous bunch-back'd toad! (Taken from: Richard III) 6) Thou warped fly-bitten nut-hook! 7) Canst thou believe thy living is a life, so stinkingly depending? Go mend, go mend. (Taken from: Measure for Measure) 8) Thou caluminous milk-livered haggard! 9) There's no more faith in thee than in a stewed prune. (Taken from: Henry V) -- Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. 'Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil.' -- (Exodus 23:2) 'It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.' -- Jiddu Krishnamurti |
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#113
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On Nov 7, 8:43 am, SBD wrote:
On Nov 7, 6:03 am, " wrote: That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/evans.html |
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#114
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"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 7, 8:43 am, SBD wrote: On Nov 7, 6:03 am, " wrote: That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/evans.html This is in fact true. Though unfortunately for Mr. Kingston's favorite it is entirely inconclusive since, like himself, he disagrees with GM Evans on every subject. Phil Innes |
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#115
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On Nov 9, 11:00 am, "Chess One" wrote:
That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: Though unfortunately for Mr. Kingston's favorite it is entirely inconclusive since, like himself, he disagrees with GM Evans on every subject. That's not the real issue here. The real issue is another fabricated claim, unsupported by facts, re-re-re-reconfirming what we already knew: that LP is a bilious liar. One can have no more faith in his rubbish than in a stewed prune (unless one is a knotty-pated fool, of course). ---------- On another subject, it is not really the case that Edward Winter /disagrees/ with Larry Evans. I think the man's beef with LE pertains to his often grotesque methods of distorting facts, and spellings, and dates. For instance, if EW were to complain that LE got the date wrong on some ancient game or tourney, he would not be arguing about when it occurred, but pointing out what GM Evans likes to call "a typo", which is in reality a careless error on his own part, but which he can never manage to admit having made, owning his own words, as you say. If EW were to correct a spelling error, he would not be disagreeing with LE (or LP) on the correct spelling of a name, but instead he would be asking that writers take greater care in their work, at least attempting to get such things right without having to constantly be corrected by their superiors. In fact, were we in need of an example where the two writers actually disagree /on an issue/, we need look no further than EW's tough stance on publishing sloppy work. And it is not only Larry Evans who has been targeted; countless others have been skewered for the exact same crimes, chief among them, Ray Keene. On the one extreme we have scholars like EW, who demand nothing short of perfection in published works; and on the other hand, we have hacks who churn out a plethora of sloppily-written rubbish, along with some carelessly thrown-together work of some real value. In the middle, or perhaps to the left a bit, we have a happy medium, but no one writer can be all things to all people, excepting Shakespeare and maybe Paul Keres. -- help bot |
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#116
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On Nov 9, 11:00 am, "Chess One" wrote:
"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message On Nov 7, 8:43 am, SBD wrote: On Nov 7, 6:03 am, " wrote: That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/evans.html This is in fact true. Though unfortunately for Mr. Kingston's favorite it is entirely inconclusive since, like himself, he disagrees with GM Evans on every subject. It would be more accurate to say that Evans makes frequent unsupported assertions, commits frequent factual errors, and is disinclined to correct them, thus contrasting with Winter on all three counts. Actually, Phil, Winter has said complimentary things about Evans now and then. A sample: "In some ways Larry Evans' journalism is of a superior quality ... The trouble is that although his best is very good, Evans is not very often at it." -- Chess Notes #322, 1983 "... Larry Evans, normally one of the sanest and acutest of commentators." -- CN #1143, 1986 Admittedly, positive references are few, and seem to have ceased after 1986, but there was a time when Winter had at least a modicum of respect for Evans. I suspect that vanished circa 1987, perhaps partly as a result of Evans' meltdown over Quesada-Prins (see above link) and other matters he wrote about to Winter in the middle of that year (see CN #1457, 1987). |
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#117
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"help bot" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 9, 11:00 am, "Chess One" wrote: That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: Though unfortunately for Mr. Kingston's favorite it is entirely inconclusive since, like himself, he disagrees with GM Evans on every subject. That's not the real issue here. The real issue is another fabricated claim, unsupported by facts, re-re-re-reconfirming what we already knew: that LP is a bilious liar. One can have no more faith in his rubbish than in a stewed prune (unless one is a knotty-pated fool, of course). Let me just interupt this vague rant a moment, and inquire what the subject is? I hope it isn't Soviet 'fixing' of top games, since at least 4 top Russians are on the record to heavily side with Evans. Perhaps you had some other subject in mind? If it was a specific engagement or even a game, pray be so kind to mention your own topic. ---------- On another subject, it is not really the case that Edward Winter /disagrees/ with Larry Evans. I think the man's beef with LE pertains to his often grotesque methods of distorting facts, and spellings, and dates. For instance, if EW were to complain that LE got the date wrong on some ancient game or tourney, Then he would be a vast hypocrite, since as Ray Keene pointed out the previous issue of Kingpin, 3 years in the making, was so full of errors of all types it had to be withdrawn, corrected and reprinted. 3 years! How ironic [or intensely ironic, as Our Taylor likes it] that a reader pointed them out to Keene, who then pointed them in public. Now the point is that the slightest error from Evans and Keene is collected, collated and stored for years, then all represented so as to diminish their work from some hypothetical standard; a standard Winter himself does not attain. The point sir, is that to err is human. Those who do not admit that are rogues. I even tried to throw Kingston a bone about kiting his rating a full 500 points by admitting that my own writing was sloppy on my own rating, and wasn't his of the same loose usenet stripe? NO! He declaims, the error is totally in other people, since to mention a rating is /not/ to reference normal OTB activity. )If you set up to be a pedant, better to have something to be pedantic about. And Kingston, Winter are not even has-beens, and there is your motive for The World According to Carp. But let us not evaluate abstractions or these continuous hypotesies, if, if, if - since all this emotion seems to have occuded any specific matter that may have occured to you. Phil Innes he would not be arguing about when it occurred, but pointing out what GM Evans likes to call "a typo", which is in reality a careless error on his own part, but which he can never manage to admit having made, owning his own words, as you say. If EW were to correct a spelling error, he would not be disagreeing with LE (or LP) on the correct spelling of a name, but instead he would be asking that writers take greater care in their work, at least attempting to get such things right without having to constantly be corrected by their superiors. In fact, were we in need of an example where the two writers actually disagree /on an issue/, we need look no further than EW's tough stance on publishing sloppy work. And it is not only Larry Evans who has been targeted; countless others have been skewered for the exact same crimes, chief among them, Ray Keene. On the one extreme we have scholars like EW, who demand nothing short of perfection in published works; and on the other hand, we have hacks who churn out a plethora of sloppily-written rubbish, along with some carelessly thrown-together work of some real value. In the middle, or perhaps to the left a bit, we have a happy medium, but no one writer can be all things to all people, excepting Shakespeare and maybe Paul Keres. -- help bot |
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#118
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On Nov 7, 7:15 am, "Chess One" wrote:
All anyone has to do is read Kingston's article in Chess Life (about Keres throwing games to Botvinnik in the 1948 World Championship] to see that he denigrated Evans' ability to analyze by saying Nunn was the better player. That statement grossly misrepresents the facts. What GM Evans tried to do was argue that he, and he alone was a good enough analyst to "detect" certain "clues" embedded in the moves of some chess game. That argument was easily skewered by pointing out that even after seeing these alleged "clues", much stronger players than GM Evans disagreed with his "analysis". The fact remains that this is and was not chess analysis per se, so the question of relative strength is merely an aside to the real question; but even so, there can be no doubt that at his advanced age, GM Evans was no longer any match for a host of younger players, including GM Nunn. Personally, I find this ego-stroking business appalling -- all the more since chess is only a game. The real issue can be settled in the realms of logic and reason -- even by the weakest of chess players; even by the likes of Sanny or Rob Mitchell. It merely requires an ability to think /rationally/. In my opinion, the case for GM Bronstein has been shortchanged by it having been adopted as a pet cause by the likes of LP and LE; surely there must have been some /rational/ approach to presenting the case, but we may never see it, thanks to these hacks. Pardon me! What a farce of an argument. If you don't like American opinion I can, and have done, offered Russian ones which make any Evans statement seem quite mild in contrast. I have no objection to having opinions. Just don't try and pass them off as established facts, utilizing bogus methods such as ad hominem, broiled red herring, etc., etc. We've all we can eat here! And this is merely to answer in the rather narrow vein proposed by those who contest what Evans has said. To mention but a couple of factors, the //experience// of engaging Russian chess at this level during the cold war is rather different than having 'opinions' about it by latter-day saints and GM Nunn! Indeed. But that has no relevance here. If LE wanted to argue than /in his opinion/ this could very well have happened, he is perfectly welcome to do that. Larry Parr is correct to repeat here a little e-mail campaign to revoke or reverse Laurie on this subject. Baked, broiled or fried herring? Fish contains omega-fatty acids, you know. Just beware of mercury. Though such campaigning is a 'shy subject' for Taylor Kingston is quite beside the point of whether he is right or not. What is at point is Kingston's resentment of Evans because he declined to give even more space to his protestations. I see. So you are obsessed with the issue of TK vs. LP, who wins, and in what round? --------- I was objecting to the logical error wherein some poor fool claimed that Larry Evans' chess ability was chopped and grated by merely pointing out facts. In reality, the playing strength of LE is irrelevant, since the flaw in his article lay elsewhere. But for the record, at the time LE published his article, he was no longer in the same class as Dr. Nunn, so it also falls flat from that approach, though that is really irrelevant and immaterial. -------- This is interpreted by Kingston as avoiding an unpleasant truth - whereas, and I have somewhere, the declined letter - any continuation of the subject in Chess Life cannot have seemed fruitful to Evans because Kingston never improved upon or developed his first contested point. TK should never have expected a "fair trial" treatment in the pages of Chess Lies. That would have been an anomaly, much like you or me winning the World Open. I might add that it also sought to lionise the issue between two poles - and if extensive correspondance on those lines were to be developed, published and so on, it would be, IMO, insufficient to compass the issue. As Larry Evans himself noted, there is little point in participating in censored (or otherwise manipulated) mediums such as the USCF forum -- or here, Chess Lies magazine. Every editor or column writer will skew things his own way, so the best advice is like that for dealing with lobes-be-three weeds: leave it be. -- help bot |
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#119
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On Nov 9, 9:42 am, Taylor Kingston wrote:
Can a list of these agreeing scholars be produced? As we expected, Parr has failed to name a single one. As far as I know, none exist. Meanwhile, here's a scholar who definitely does *not* agee with Evans: I suppose if LP had fabricated several names to match his fabricated claim, the critics would find something else to complain about. As for me, I commend him for *not* fabricating the requested names -- that's quite an achievement, considering his character. -- help bot |
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#120
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"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ups.com... Though unfortunately for Mr. Kingston's favorite it is entirely inconclusive since, like himself, he disagrees with GM Evans on every subject. It would be more accurate to say that Evans makes frequent unsupported assertions, commits frequent factual errors, and is disinclined to correct them, thus contrasting with Winter on all three counts. See my previous post to corn-fed. Actually, Phil, Winter has said complimentary things about Evans now and then. A sample: "In some ways Larry Evans' journalism is of a superior quality ... The trouble is that although his best is very good, Evans is not very often at it." -- Chess Notes #322, 1983 ROFL! That is rather like my own people, who say: "There is good, even in a Saxon, though it is not much said." You have to understand Taylor, that indiscriminate fault-finding is the same value as indiscriminate praise. That is to say, of little value. And people attach themselves to Greats who provide them their source material. It is usually a form of living vicariously, through others, though sometimes its possible to break through and attain your own worth by actually creating something yourself from an appreciation of what connection with Greats provides you. Otherwise it is not a healthy psychological condition. "... Larry Evans, normally one of the sanest and acutest of commentators." -- CN #1143, 1986 ROFL -- "Normally" -- damning with very abbreviated and conditional praise! What a crock-artist! Phil Innes Admittedly, positive references are few, and seem to have ceased after 1986, but there was a time when Winter had at least a modicum of respect for Evans. I suspect that vanished circa 1987, perhaps partly as a result of Evans' meltdown over Quesada-Prins (see above link) and other matters he wrote about to Winter in the middle of that year (see CN #1457, 1987). |
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