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#91
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On Nov 6, 12:12 pm, Taylor Kingston wrote:
On Nov 6, 1:24 pm, "j.d.walker" wrote: On Nov 6, 7:27 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: Alas, if only it were that simple. People have widely varying definitions of "that which is right," often including provisos to the effect that it is right to kill those who have slightly different definitions. In life, as in chess, general principles apply only so far. Eventually one must get down to concrete specifics. I admit there are obstacles. Since we have a chess playing audience here why not consider this in a chess context for the sake of discussion. If you try to develop good judgment in chess you must learn and think more about "chessic" cause and effect. When you make mistakes and lose, you must try to learn why you went wrong and how you will improve in the future. This refines your good judgment. As you proceed through the cycle of learning, playing, digesting results, and reassessing your game, it gives you feedback via your results at the board. I believe that if you do not try to improve your good judgment that you are headed for worse results. If some one set out with the intent to always look for the 2nd best move, they would be following bad judgment on the whole. I would expect their rating to plummet. Back to the generalization... Although various people may have directly opposite views as to what is right, that is a different matter than trying to figure out what is best for an individual making choices for his/her own life. Even so, on the macro scale, if everyone decided to always pursue the 2nd best idea, I believe the collective results would likely be a very sorry mess making our current troubled world look like a relative paradise. On the whole I agree with you, with a couple of caveats: 1) An important difference between chess and life is that in chess, paranoia is an entirely valid world-view. Your opponent IS out to get you (unless you're composing helpmates). In life, some people are out to get other people, but it's not a good idea to assume that of every one. 2) I respectfully disagree about your "2nd-best move" concept. In chess, probably 99.9% of all players come nowhere near playing even the 2nd-best move as a general rule. They are more likely to choose a less good move, even a rather bad one. Allowing for obvious exceptions like forced recaptures, I dare say someone who could unfailingly play what is objectively the 2nd-best move on the board would almost certainly be a high-ranking GM, probably even a world champion. Likewise, in life, I'd say people on the whole often fail to make choices anywhere near as good as 2nd-best. Just as with chess moves, most choices in life are not either/or; one usually has multiple, even myriad alternatives. People often make disastrous choices, which is a major reason we have wars, crime, hatreds, and all the other self- inflicted ills man is prone to. Rather than 2nd-best giving us "a very sorry mess," I think most people woudl be very happy with the world that 2nd-best would provide. Then again, this disagreement may be purely semantic, depending on how one defines "second best." I'm using it in the sense of, say, the 2nd-best choice among 10 or 15 alternatives. If your'e thinking of it as a choice between only two alternatives, that's a horse of a different color. Well there is a difference in the way we are looking at this. I am talking about the choices that an individual is able to come up with and evaluate. You appear to be talking about the objective best choices which I admit could be different often. The objective best choice may not be apparent to one and thus cannot be selected. So given a set of choices that one is able to come up, I submit it will generally be better to chose the one perceived as best rather than the one perceived as second best.... Consider that and let me know if it makes your conclusion different. Meanwhile, I am fighting a flu bug and need some hot soup. Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. |
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#92
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On Nov 6, 4:18 pm, "j.d.walker" wrote:
On Nov 6, 12:12 pm, Taylor Kingston wrote: On Nov 6, 1:24 pm, "j.d.walker" wrote: On Nov 6, 7:27 am, Taylor Kingston wrote: Alas, if only it were that simple. People have widely varying definitions of "that which is right," often including provisos to the effect that it is right to kill those who have slightly different definitions. In life, as in chess, general principles apply only so far. Eventually one must get down to concrete specifics. I admit there are obstacles. Since we have a chess playing audience here why not consider this in a chess context for the sake of discussion. If you try to develop good judgment in chess you must learn and think more about "chessic" cause and effect. When you make mistakes and lose, you must try to learn why you went wrong and how you will improve in the future. This refines your good judgment. As you proceed through the cycle of learning, playing, digesting results, and reassessing your game, it gives you feedback via your results at the board. I believe that if you do not try to improve your good judgment that you are headed for worse results. If some one set out with the intent to always look for the 2nd best move, they would be following bad judgment on the whole. I would expect their rating to plummet. Back to the generalization... Although various people may have directly opposite views as to what is right, that is a different matter than trying to figure out what is best for an individual making choices for his/her own life. Even so, on the macro scale, if everyone decided to always pursue the 2nd best idea, I believe the collective results would likely be a very sorry mess making our current troubled world look like a relative paradise. On the whole I agree with you, with a couple of caveats: 1) An important difference between chess and life is that in chess, paranoia is an entirely valid world-view. Your opponent IS out to get you (unless you're composing helpmates). In life, some people are out to get other people, but it's not a good idea to assume that of every one. 2) I respectfully disagree about your "2nd-best move" concept. In chess, probably 99.9% of all players come nowhere near playing even the 2nd-best move as a general rule. They are more likely to choose a less good move, even a rather bad one. Allowing for obvious exceptions like forced recaptures, I dare say someone who could unfailingly play what is objectively the 2nd-best move on the board would almost certainly be a high-ranking GM, probably even a world champion. Likewise, in life, I'd say people on the whole often fail to make choices anywhere near as good as 2nd-best. Just as with chess moves, most choices in life are not either/or; one usually has multiple, even myriad alternatives. People often make disastrous choices, which is a major reason we have wars, crime, hatreds, and all the other self- inflicted ills man is prone to. Rather than 2nd-best giving us "a very sorry mess," I think most people woudl be very happy with the world that 2nd-best would provide. Then again, this disagreement may be purely semantic, depending on how one defines "second best." I'm using it in the sense of, say, the 2nd-best choice among 10 or 15 alternatives. If your'e thinking of it as a choice between only two alternatives, that's a horse of a different color. Well there is a difference in the way we are looking at this. I am talking about the choices that an individual is able to come up with and evaluate. You appear to be talking about the objective best choices which I admit could be different often. The objective best choice may not be apparent to one and thus cannot be selected. Indeed. On the chess board, I can't tell you how many times post- mortem analysis has shown that the objectively best move did not even occur to me, let alone get rejected for various faulty reasons. No doubt in life as well. So given a set of choices that one is able to come up, I submit it will generally be better to chose the one perceived as best rather than the one perceived as second best.... Dangerously close to tautology, perhaps. But essentially I must agree. Consider that and let me know if it makes your conclusion different. Meanwhile, I am fighting a flu bug and need some hot soup. Then I would say that "That which is right" requires that I leave you in peace to rest and recuperate. |
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#93
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Taylor Kingston wrote:
snip Well there is a difference in the way we are looking at this. I am talking about the choices that an individual is able to come up with and evaluate. You appear to be talking about the objective best choices which I admit could be different often. The objective best choice may not be apparent to one and thus cannot be selected. Indeed. On the chess board, I can't tell you how many times post- mortem analysis has shown that the objectively best move did not even occur to me, let alone get rejected for various faulty reasons. No doubt in life as well. So given a set of choices that one is able to come up, I submit it will generally be better to chose the one perceived as best rather than the one perceived as second best.... Dangerously close to tautology, perhaps. But essentially I must agree. snip Dear Mr. Kingston, It appears that we have arrived at some level of agreement on what we are discussing. Let me take a few steps beyond that and say that the continual process of trying to do the right thing as we have described it, can help a person refine their good judgment with the effect of allowing them to perceive a greater number of possible good choices in future encounters with similar circumstances. Perhaps they have a better chance of identifying that illusive "best choice" of the objective view. I think of this as developing intuition to aid in decision making. That may not be precise, but it works for me. I also suggest that someone who makes of habit of doubting their good judgment and casting about in a more random fashion in selecting choices loses confidence in their abilities and suffers from a diminished perception of possible good choices. An unscrupulous chess hustler recognizing this can demonstrably enfeeble weaker opposition by ridiculing their moves and berating them. Of course the wise hustler will compliment them on their great improvement as they pay off and go out the door so that the patzer will return to be milked again... shrugs -- 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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#94
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Mike Murray wrote:
On Tue, 06 Nov 2007 11:56:14 -0000, "j.d.walker" wrote: No, I am not a Unitarian. To be completely honest, examine this site and form your own opinion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Life_Church My credentials are in the mail... Did you opt for the holographic ID card? It adds a level of authenticity and prestige which, at times, may come in handy. For example, at the reception after the one wedding I conducted, a clergyman guest of the more traditional seminary background attempted polite conversation and asked where I'd done my training. I merely flashed my holographic ID and had to say nothing. He too remained silent, so I assume he was properly impressed. Hi Mike, When I was investigating I noticed at least a half dozen organizations claiming various kinds of association with ULC. The Seattle Monastery group in particular had apparently broken off relations with another "headquarters" group that sprang from the original founder. A number of these groups seem to be in it for the money they can get by merchandising. I chose the "Headquarters" group. I do not know what sort of credentials they will send me. It will be the default set. I may put the bucks out to get the ULC press pass. It could be fun to have press privileges at some events. I do not plan to do weddings or funerals. The concept of exorcisms does intrigue me. Maybe we could team up and exorcise this news group some day. :^) Or, maybe we could simply exorcise Mr. Parr. He seems to have a fixation on shocking dead toads. :^) I added the "U.C." suffix so that people would have a shot at learning that it stood for "Under Construction." Then they would be less likely to confuse me with a traditional religious ordained minister. The main thing though is that I do agree with the statement: "Do that which is right." and I don't mind talking about it. (See other messages in this thread.) Thanks for the nudge that your messages gave me, leading me to investigate ULC. -- 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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#95
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LET ME HAZARD A GUESS
By the way, one of the participants sent me a private email offering to send me scads of dirt on an opponent proving that the man was a complete scoundrel. No, thanks. Not interested. Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. For the record, our NMnot Kingston is a private email type who wants to send dirt on this or that opponent. See, for example, his "confidential" attempts with Richard Laurie, author of an interesting play on Alekhine that has been produced. He tried to persuade Laurie to retract an item he submitted to Chess Life. BLAST FROM THE PAST OPEN LETTER FROM RICHARD LAURIE (April 2 2006): "Mr. Kingston's memory is extremely faulty. He contacted me on the Net, then wanted to send me materials to try and win me over to his side of the argument -- that Evans was wrong. After that he said HE WOULD LIKE TO KEEP OUR CORRESPONDENCE QUIET [emphasis mine] just between us. It sounded a little shaky, but so far I saw nothing wrong. "Then he said he contacted the editor and asked if it would be okay for him to say I had changed my mind.. That's when I jumped on him in my last letter, that I had not changed my mind and agreed to look at his materials only to see what he had to offer.. I found nothing substantial there and I told him that as far as secrecy went, he already violated that by jumping the gun and contacting the editor. "Mr. Kingston e-mailed me about half a dozen times. While I never showed Evans any of his material, I told him I did feel perfectly free to show Evans my own responses. 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. "Kingston wanted me to retract my printed view of the situation as it appeared in Evans On Chess. He wanted me to say that I was wrong and. therefore, Evans was wrong ..I even wrote the editor saying I had not changed my mind, and that ended the matter." And now NMnot Kingston crawls a bit to the Rev. Walker. Please note the implicit admission of having lied: in his previous posting, he told the Rev. that he did not understand the twitching frog story. Now he understands it all quite perfectly. He's oleaginous all right. j.d.walker wrote: On Nov 6, 12:21 am, " wrote: THE REV. STEERS CLEAR I will adroitly hop aside and let you all proceed as you will. -- Rev. J.D. Walker The Rev. Walker has decided not to inhale these forums mists and exhalations. He will be missing a great deal. One had hoped he could have tried his hand at one monster thread -- just to learn the joys. Perhaps the significance of "The" in "The Historian," an exchange I had with one Neil Brennen, would have significance eventually for the Rev. Walker. But he wishes to steer clear. I had hoped to get him embroiled with NMnot Kingston, who offered unwitting provocation. Alas, no luck. Yes, I understood the twitching frog story, and I am fairly sure that the Rev. Walker understands that our NMnot Kingston understood it all too well. Hence the barely disguised hostility from NMnot toward the Rev. Larry Parr j.d.walker wrote: On Nov 4, 10:45 pm, " wrote: HE DOESN'T TAKE THESE DEBATES SERIOUSLY. NOT. Rev. Walker, as an rgcp novice, it would appear you are not aware that Mr. Parr is known here and in other chess circles by the name "Liarry" Parr. His mendacity is legendary. I suggest you take that into consideration before deciding that any argument of his is convincing....However, he is not anyone of importance (neither am I, really), so I don't take our debates too seriously. -- Taylor Kingston Taylor Kingston, Mr. 2300+ Elo, tells us that he does not take the debates here too seriously even as he squiggles to the occasion like that shocked frog. He tells us that he debates to dispel the mendacity of this and other writers who disagree with him as well as people he respects. To be sure, the claim that he does not take the debates seriously is a serious lie in itself. Simply please reread the man's evidently anguished posting in response to the Rev. Walker. Judge for yourself. He lies even when he says that he reprehends lying. My question to NMnot Kingston within the hearing of the Rev. Walker: did you write messages under other names on these forums in which you undertook to praise YOUR OWN ARGUMENTS? A yes or no will suffice. Yours, Larry Parr And, alas for the fate of my soul, lovin' it! j.d.walker wrote: On Nov 4, 6:13 pm, Taylor Kingston wrote: On Nov 4, 7:45 pm, "j.d.walker" wrote: On Nov 4, 4:16 pm, Taylor Kingston wrote: On Nov 3, 11:01 am, "j.d.walker" wrote: I find your argument convincing, but I have to ask myself: "why is this all worth arguing over?" Is your aim simply to defeat several debate opponents, or is there some larger purpose that a rgcp novice like myself is missing? Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. Rev. Walker, as an rgcp novice, it would appear you are not aware that Mr. Parr is known here and in other chess circles by the name "Liarry" Parr. His mendacity is legendary. I suggest you take that into consideration before deciding that any argument of his is convincing. Dear Mr. Kingston, I am going to stay out of this quarrel. I had the impression that you had just decided to involve yourself in it, by stating that you found Parr's arguments regarding me convincing. Parr can sound very convincing to the uninformed; to those who know the facts he is just another dirty politician. In any event, having been involved in these quarrels far longer, I can only agree with your current decision. These quarrels never resolve, because there is no ultimate authority. The smear-artists are free to repeat their lies when and as they choose. One can only hope to persuade the reasonable minority. It appears that it has been going on for far longer than it should. There seems to be no real purpose for it. Well, I see that you include in your signature a quote from Scripture, "Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil." Does that mean we should do nothing to oppose wrongdoing by an individual when it stares us in the face? It appears that there is plenty of mendacity and nastiness available for anyone that wants to wallow in it. Oh, the rec.games.chess groups are absolutely full of it. That's why it's so important to be well informed before choosing sides. Larry admits that he is drawn by the thrill of debate. Is your motivation similar? My motivation regarding Larry Parr has generally been to counter his mendacity. He has unfairly maligned both myself and people I respect. He supports people not worthy of respect, such as the egregious Sam Sloan. Parr and I agree on some important issues (e.g. FIDE governance), but in other areas his dishonesty is serial and inexcusable, both in general terms and regarding myself specifically. However, he is not anyone of importance (neither am I, really), so I don't take our debates too seriously. begin sermon To my mind the whole idea of a rating system is an illusion of order that doesn't exist in the real world. That people choose to participate in it and judge each other by it, whether to honor or berate, is a bit pathetic. Yet, I admit that I also was once a captive of the rating gods. You can break free! I did. end sermon The message of your sermon is commendable. Its relevance to my disagreements with Parr eludes me. 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 Mr. Kingston, I take no stand on the merits of the facts behind the arguments. I believe Mr. Parr when he says he is in this for kicks. I also believe his claim that this argument keeps resurfacing as I have seen it several times in my short sojourn here. Lastly, I believe you when you say that you are attempting to fight something you regard as wrong. However, consider the following story. Once upon a time, there was a retired professor of biology named, let's say, "Curly." He still liked to keep his hand in the trade just a little bit. So he set up a small laboratory in his garage. He nailed several dead frogs to an old pine board. Whenever needed, he would go out to the garage to apply voltage to the bottoms of the impaled frogs. It gave him secret delight tinged with a wee bit o' shame to watch them kick furiously. He loved the sense of power it gave him to realize he could go out and do this whenever he wanted. He was in control. If this little story actually has any bearing, I am left with this question: When will the frogs no longer respond to the voltage? Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. No, no! I will not stand in judgment, playing Moe to your Curly, Larry... Neither will I be seduced by the scent of fresh pine and the crisp crackle of Tesla energies. I will adroitly hop aside and let you all proceed as you will. I offer my place to Phil Innes whose arts of obfuscation give him the tools to survive in this garage of twitching toads and barking moon bats.. As you were gentlemen. Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. Mr. Parr, I am not leaving the forum just yet. I have other windmills to tilt at in other threads. I believe I have learned a lesson from my engagement in this thread. Some of the participants are likely to have saved years of this drivel so that at the appropriate time they can dredge it up and throw it over the fence at a pack of baying dogs as they conceive their opponents to be. Then this goes back and forth. As an incident involving hundreds of posts finally dies down, the seasons pass, Someone innocently and unknowingly writes a "trigger text" and then the whole thing comes to life once again. I salute your ability to make the frog twitch Larry, but it is not for me. :^) By the way, one of the participants sent me a private email offering to send me scads of dirt on an opponent proving that the man was a complete scoundrel. No, thanks. Not interested. Cheers, Rev. J.D. Walker, U.C. |
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#96
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On Nov 6, 10:24 pm, " 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. -- help bot |
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#97
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MORE DRIVEL FROM KENNEDY
"Not to grant provisional assent to the hypothesis of coercion on Keres seems willfully obtuse. Conclusion: the Commies did it." -- Taylor Kingston on Keres throwing games to Botvinnik in the 1948 Championship. 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). But the Botster conveniently omits the attempt by NMnot Kingston to secretly contact Richard Laurie to try and persuade him to retract an item he submitted to Chess Life. "I didn't want to spend three months of my life watching Soviets throw games to each other," Reuben Fine explained to GM Evans when asked why he declined to participate in the 1948 World Championship. Needless to add, the Botster is again short on research and long on opinions. help bot wrote: On Nov 6, 10:24 pm, " 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. -- help bot |
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#98
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"help bot" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 6, 10:24 pm, " 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. 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! Larry Parr is correct to repeat here a little e-mail campaign to revoke or reverse Laurie on this subject. 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. 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. 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. Phil Innes -- help bot |
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#99
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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? |
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#100
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On Nov 7, 7:03 am, " wrote:
"Not to grant provisional assent to the hypothesis of coercion on Keres seems willfully obtuse. Conclusion: the Commies did it." -- Taylor Kingston on Keres throwing games to Botvinnik in the 1948 Championship. That issue has been rehashed ad infinitum and most scholars More lies from Larry Parr. There are no "scholars" when it comes to this sort of thing; it is a matter of logic and reason, not the interpretation of historical documents. now agree with Larry Evans's analysis of the games in his groundbreaking article THE TRAGEDY OF PAUL KERES (Chess Life, October 1996). That article broke wind, not ground. But the Botster conveniently omits the attempt by NMnot Kingston to secretly contact Richard Laurie to try and persuade him to retract an item he submitted to Chess Life. That is /irrelevant/, not "convenient". Nothing TK has done or can do has any impact whatsoever on the fact that GM Evans' article was worthless. Only in the very strange mind of Larry Parr are these two things tightly interwoven; for LP, there is some sort of war going on in which victory over the enemy equates to verification of irrational thinking. Rational thinkers can see clearly that no war can ever decide such matters. "I didn't want to spend three months of my life watching Soviets throw games to each other," Reuben Fine explained to GM Evans when asked why he declined to participate in the 1948 World Championship. More fluff. I like a house to be built upon a foundation of concrete, cement. Granted it is cold and hard, but it still beats a foundation of fluffery. So long as the case for GM Bronstein continues to be plagued by "support" from hacks, it is going to be tough going. Anyone who would like to make a serious case would be well advised to wait until these ratpackers go away, lest their rational arguments be dismissed as lunacy out of sheer force of habit. -- help bot |
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