![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: chess, improve, sam, sloan, will |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#51
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 3, 5:45 am, "Chess One" wrote:
My writing about my rating was sloppy.... Mine was because I was writing to non-chess players, who don't even know which way the ELO scale goes, up or down. That is not the case. You will be surprised at the number of chessplayers on HLAS. Here's what one of them wrote: "This I cannot understand at all. USCF ratings are a matter of public record, and either he had the rating (in which case it is recorded) or he did not. And I certainly cannot understand his claim that he was "almost" an International Master. After all, it's a lifetime title awarded by the FIDE, and either one has been awarded it or one hasn't; being "almost" an International Master is, as I said before, like being "almost pregnant." " |
| Ads |
|
#52
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 3, 5:45 am, "Chess One" wrote:
My writing about my rating was sloppy, so was yours. Mine was because I was writing to non-chess players, who don't even know which way the ELO scale goes, up or down. For that excuse to work, you would need to have written something along these lines: "I once was among the top 1% of all casual chess players worldwide, IMO; this makes me an expert, so you should listen to me, not to Nil Brennan, who is a relatively weaker player." Instead, what you wrote made very specific claims, including assigning yourself an imaginary rating of 2450 -- a number you now insist was meaningless to your intended victims/audience (so why bother inventing it?). It makes for a good story, but the inconsistencies ruin the plot. For one thing, most people are not even able to decipher whether a higher number or a lower one is superior here, as it could be that zero represents perfection, and GK's 2800+ means he has a long way to go to catch up with Rob Mitchell. -- help bot P.S.: I recently laid claim to 1350 on GetClub, but lo and behold, my memory failed me! I am not only below that number (as help bot), but I am locked up so that I can't get over it and pretend the slip-up never happened. (grumbles to self) Hence, I must resort to Plan B: I of course meant that my peak rating (as nomorechess) was over 1350. There -- that should fix it. P.S.S.: Whew! That was a close one. |
|
#53
|
|||
|
|||
|
wrote in message oups.com... WHAT THE DICKENS! --OFF TOPIC Not very on topic, and tangential, is a previous topic I engaged here with Mr. Parr, on the subject of 'placing' people by borrowing them into groups --- and we discussed how both Marxists did that with Dickens, and if indeed he would profile as a modern liberal. -- Phil Innes Dear Phil, I think one can make sense of Dickens' socio-political views if you think of him in the American Progressive tradition of southern politics. Namely, the supposed benefits of social democracy are for white folk rather than for blacks.That puts the matter in a single sentence and makes sense of the contradictions apparent but not inherent. You will recollect that Marx himself had no place for Negroes in his system. Dear Larry, There is an extensive review of such folk in The Wine Dark Sea, set in the pacific Islands & Peru, by P. O'B, where the paradise on earth can be established, freedom of religion, true egalitarian systems, no hierarchies or churches or church taxes! Except for the awkward problem of having to eliminate the natives to get the thing off the ground, then by inate human good will, the place will run itself. A French enthusiast named DuTord is the propopent of said system, following the ideas of that mumping villain Rousseau. The likely view of a Dickens toward Negroes and toward many colonial peoples is that they annoyed him by appearing human. You will recollect that such is the point made by Lawrence of Arabia in "Seven Pillars of Wisdom." The Negro would not be so objectionable if he had seven hands and three heads, but instead has the effrontery to appear in bodily form as we do. Gosh - I first read 7 pilllars when I was 19. Fascinating that the man who survived the film, in grubby RAF overalls, should have cabinet ministers dropping by to see him, since his was the only opinion Arabs trusted, even after they were betrayed at the end of the first war. His was also the only disinterested opinion in Britain in an area of the world that was ever in danger of becoming inflamed and a real biblical Megidio. Orwell paid him the particular compliment of stating that his was the /only/ intellectual opinion on the right worth taking in. Still worse, he awakens within us the suspicion that he may be, more or less, about the same as we, though Lawrence does not not admit that as even a remote possibility. Hence Lawrence's anger that we have impostors as human beings who thereby drag down one's own status as fully human. To invoke another writer - probably the best on this subject - would be to reference van der Post, who championed the black man in Africa, notably the Bushmen, /but also/ what he called the first person in us all, the aboriginal person. The acceptance or rejection of that sense of ourselves was what deeply interested Jung about Europeans and in fact set him in sharply different focus from Freud - in fact vdP and Jung were close friends thereafter. Symbolically [of course] they met over a discussion about making fire. He told me that when Jung went to Africa the 'missing' European sense of this first person in us, almost overwhelmed Jung by comparison - and I think neither of them trusted Euro-intellectualism thereby, since it did not admit this inner man - this inner 'black' man! Latterly here in the US, the philosopher Jacob Needleman admits this relationship as being of prime importance to the USA as 'the world's country.' As well as its neglect of all things 'black' being a principle crime. [Currently the newest 'black' people are Mexican] After all, if the Negro is mistaken as human by others, those others may imagine that Lawrence himself partakes of important similarities with Negroes. He found such impudence to be intolerable. The writer, poet-Laureate, Ted Hughes said that Shakespeare was the first to frame this issue in 'modern' times. And the rejection by Macbeth of the 3 hags, is rejection of the female side of life, and in fact the /power/ and the means to reflect at all, other than as intellection. It is interesting that this state endures, and even today, people are still willing to state that La MacBeth 'made him do it'. Now nations do it! Kipling spoke of "lesser breeds without the Law," by which I think he meant, if you read Recessional very carefully, the Mosaic Law. The best you could do was to build carefully and, having built, as Kipling writes in the White Man's Burden, "Watch Sloth and heathen Folly/ Bring all you hope to nought." His writing in this very town was perhaps the most inspired of all. His most animistic books written here - Jungle Book[s] was a long time before Lord of the Rings, or the works of J. C. Powys. Dickens was concerned about alleviating suffering among white Christian folk, whilst objecting to really ill treatment of Jews and natives not because they merit his concern on the basis of their intrinsic value, but because to not be so concerned is to coarsen one's own spirit. Yes. Except Smiley makes the point that Dickens did not as much relate to others from any social stance we should recognise as 'politics' but as novelist, which is at least vicariously, a one to one relationship. I think he drove what was to become public polity, by being the first writer to look fair and square at the new world of the industrial revolution - and the lauded Victorian middle-classes of England - though he was an improbable candidate for that category himself, and to actually attempt to critique it from a value level. It is also complicated since the great divide in his life surrounding his divorce [where he not only behaved badly, but in public, rather like his 'misbehavior' here in the US when he refused to be the literary 'Great' as was expected of him - whatever he was he didn't care to hide or dissemble about] makes a clear division in early/late Dickens. Whatever happened latterly, and to end with a reference you make repeatedly above, those 5 months in the /blacking/ factory, was his own /black/ personal experience. At least Smiley credits her female insight of this early experience as being a very potent force throughout his life, and a sort of anchor or emotional grounding which was shocking, yet an experience no middle class person could access [though I paraphrase to suit this discussion.]. Latterly [Eton educated] Orwell deliberately did the same thing. This shorter biography is very good that way, finding IMO, in all the material, both his own driving forces, and those of the society and the life of his times. At end, the subject was not engaged again to the same degree until Hardy - Tess, eg, is the cream of the country, and the new man, Angell is a modern disaster of a person. George Eliot didn't cope with it to any near extent, granting far more space to specific individual characterisation, with the occassional social topic, such as the repugnant English anti-Semiticm she illustrates in Daniel Deronda. And what lineage here! Since Hardy and Lawrence were rather more than friends - and what a great shame that their conversations at Max Gate went unrecorded, not even summarised save perhaps what he told Buchan's wife. Cordially, Phil Innes Yours, Larry Parr |
|
#54
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Oct 31, 1:19 am, Rich Hutnik wrote:
With all this lawsuit business and whatnot, I am curious how Mr. Sloan can help improve the state of chess. Mr. Sloan, can you speak up please? We're still waiting for Sam to reply to Mr. Hutnik, the original poster. So far in this thread, Sloan has done nothing but dredge up old ad-hom attacks on me that were refuted years ago. He has thereby provided nothing but support for my view, that he has no genuine interest in improving chess, only in slinging mud. I'd say that if he ever had any chance to get Mr. Hutnik's vote, he's lost it now. |
|
#55
|
|||
|
|||
|
For Gawds sake!
How many times will Brennan wholesale his lies? Playing strength of around 2400 for a couple of seasons over 25 years ago. If anyone is looking for a lying obsessive hate-mongering stalker, voila! [but who is?] Phil Innes "The Historian" wrote in message oups.com... On Nov 3, 5:45 am, "Chess One" wrote: My writing about my rating was sloppy.... Mine was because I was writing to non-chess players, who don't even know which way the ELO scale goes, up or down. That is not the case. You will be surprised at the number of chessplayers on HLAS. Here's what one of them wrote: "This I cannot understand at all. USCF ratings are a matter of public record, and either he had the rating (in which case it is recorded) or he did not. And I certainly cannot understand his claim that he was "almost" an International Master. After all, it's a lifetime title awarded by the FIDE, and either one has been awarded it or one hasn't; being "almost" an International Master is, as I said before, like being "almost pregnant." " |
|
#56
|
|||
|
|||
|
"help bot" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 3, 5:45 am, "Chess One" wrote: My writing about my rating was sloppy, so was yours. Mine was because I was writing to non-chess players, who don't even know which way the ELO scale goes, up or down. For that excuse to work, you would need to have written something along these lines: "I once was among the top 1% of all casual chess players worldwide, IMO; this makes me an expert, so you should listen to me, not to Nil Brennan, who is a relatively weaker player." Instead, what you wrote made very specific claims, including assigning yourself an imaginary rating of 2450 wrong. plain wrong. almost at im level, that's all but what the hell is it to you - other than envy? ))-- a number you now insist was meaningless of wrap it up! stop obsessing! if you want to play then do so - the rest of these obsessionals about other people are just sicko made up missunderstandings by patzers - you included to your intended victims/audience (so why bother inventing it?). It makes for a good story, but the inconsistencies ruin the plot. For one thing, most people are not even able to decipher whether a higher number or a lower one is superior here, as it could be that zero represents perfection, and GK's 2800+ means he has a long way to go to catch up with Rob Mitchell. uh... whatever that means shrug for heaven's sake, as an illustration to non-chess players [don't believe brennan's context, who is constant liar] that whatever he thought [which was insane!] is not clever chessic opinion, then we have 3 years of trash from the likes of you you tried playing chess once in the same place I do, and you scored what? 1300? but you have 3000 level opinions if you don't understand the reference by now = go ahead and say what it all /must/ mean to your understanding another 4 years if you want, alternatively, get a life, patzer! and stop polluting all these threads with your /obvious/ resentments pi -- help bot P.S.: I recently laid claim to 1350 on GetClub, but lo and behold, my memory failed me! I am not only below that number (as help bot), but I am locked up so that I can't get over it and pretend the slip-up never happened. (grumbles to self) Hence, I must resort to Plan B: I of course meant that my peak rating (as nomorechess) was over 1350. There -- that should fix it. P.S.S.: Whew! That was a close one. |
|
#57
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 3, 10:11 am, "Chess One" wrote:
For Gawds sake! How many times will Brennan wholesale his lies? Playing strength of around 2400 for a couple of seasons over 25 years ago. Again, that's not what you wrote: *************** I must qualify what I have said therefo from the resolution of the painitng on my monitor I can't tell Kings from Queens for white or black, but given the worst placements from white's perspective, I would still hold these views, [even though black is holding a piece in the air]. My qualifications for saying so is that I was nearly an international master, with a rating of 2450, which is a tolerably qualified level to offer an opinion - for example, Nil, who used to post here before splitting, so to speak, was a player of about 1400 rating, and this "ELO" scale is not linear. This is not to say that Nil could not also resolve the situation over the board - but given the best imagined placements for black and the worst for white, it is hard or even impossible to assert "mate-in- three" if a board position cannot be resolved. Phil **************** If anyone is looking for a lying obsessive hate-mongering stalker, voila! [but who is?] Stop quoting your business cards, Philsy. |
|
#58
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 3, 10:47 am, Taylor Kingston wrote:
So far in this thread, Sloan has done nothing but dredge up old ad-hom attacks on me that were refuted years ago. I see. Does that mean that you are claiming that you were at one time a 2300+ player? Sam Sloan |
|
#59
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 3, 2:19 pm, samsloan wrote:
On Nov 3, 10:47 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: So far in this thread, Sloan has done nothing but dredge up old ad-hom attacks on me that were refuted years ago. I see. Does that mean that you are claiming that you were at one time a 2300+ player? Sam, you are so tedious. All this was dealt with here years ago. Since learning that the correct Harkness-to-Elo conversion for my peak postal rating of 1806, back in 1986, was around 2260-2270 Elo, rather than 2306 as I previously thought, I don't claim now to have been 2300+. But I was pretty close. That I was officialy of Master rank and #45 in the USCF postal rankings is a matter of public record. Eat your heart out. Now, Sam, I suggest that if you are genuinely interested in helping the cause of chess, you quit wasting people's time re-asking questions that were answered years ago. Instead, answer the question Mr. Hutnik posed. But you won't do that, will you? Because you are totally negative, not the least bit positive. You haven't the least idea how to help chess, nor the least intention of doing so. I can only thank you for so thoroughly demonstrating how accurate I was in giving Mr. Hutnik such a negative report on you. |
|
#60
|
|||
|
|||
|
Chess One wrote:
For Gawds sake! How many times will Brennan wholesale his lies? Playing strength of around 2400 for a couple of seasons over 25 years ago. Where might one find documentation? -- Kenneth Sloan Computer and Information Sciences +1-205-932-2213 University of Alabama at Birmingham FAX +1-205-934-5473 Birmingham, AL 35294-1170 http://KennethRSloan.com/ |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Chess variants, with computer programs, by Mats Winther | Mats Winther | rec.games.chess.computer (Computer Chess) | 0 | July 20th 06 07:28 AM |
| rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [2/4] | pribut@yahoo.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 0 | April 23rd 06 06:21 AM |
| rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [2/4] | pribut@yahoo.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 0 | April 7th 06 06:30 AM |
| rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [2/4] | pribut@yahoo.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 0 | December 19th 05 06:36 AM |
| rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [2/4] | pribut@yahoo.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 0 | October 19th 05 06:37 AM |