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#61
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On Aug 20, 3:20*pm, "Chess One" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Aug 19, 10:56 am, "Chess One" wrote: wrote in message "He [Lasker] played in five more tournaments: Moscow 1925, second (+10 =8 -2) after Bogoljubow, ahead of Capablanca; Zurich 1934, fifth (+9 =2 -4); Moscow 1935, third (+6 =13), after Botvinnik and Flohr, ahead of Capablanca; Moscow 1936, sixth; and Nottingham 1936 (+6 =5 -3) TO SHARE SEVENTH PLACE." (emphasis added) Do you see that, Phil? "TO SHARE SEVENTH PLACE." Very plain and easy to understand. Why can't you? **Because others say different. Bill Wall for example talks of 1st to 8th place. * Bill Wall? Bill Wall?? *ROFLMAO! Bill Wall is one of the most careless, most inaccurate writers who ever said a word about chess. For examples of his studious scholarship, I commend you to these links: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/e...edibility.html http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/fun.html * Bill Wall. Lord, I can't stop chuckling. Innes had found his ideal. **Our Taylor prefers the Oxford encyclopedia To Bill Wall, I certainly do. whose idea of accuracy was to describe Boris Gulko as being away from chess, when he and his wife were being beaten up by KGB. Really, Phil? I believe your erstwhile friend Bill Hyde (or perhaps it was Larry Tapper) pointed out that the time period referred to in that OC passage did *_not_* correspond to the time Gulko was persecuted. But of course such inconvenient facts don't concern you. **The point is not to argue 'authorities' but on veracities - how do we know that anyone got it right? Well, Phil, you might start by conceding some credibility to what the actual tournament book of Nottingham 1936 says. On the subject of the Nottingham 1936 tournament, I would call that an authoritative source. That is the only issue here. To be sure of things takes more than a list of 'authorities' and calling those who have other opinion, or who simply are not convinced 'insane'. To be sure of things certainly takes more than the muddled thought processes of Phil Innes. **Bill Wall may often be criticized because he does not hide his opinion with his words. Bill Wall is often criticized because he often reports arrant nonsense as fact. To avoid being criticized one should be Vague, That's why I tend to be quite specific. But of course in Phil's Newspeak, to be specific is to be vague, if the specific statement is not what he wants to hear. then no one can tell if we are right or wrong - and we place ourselves beyond criticism. Yes, Phil, we all know that no matter what the facts, you consider yourself beyond criticism. The only drawback with Vaguery is that nothing is revealed, which is to place oneself beyond notice. Phil Innes Phil, the plain fact is that in the area of chess history, you are pretty much a nincompoop. Everyone else here knows that. I suspect you do do too, but of course you dare not admit it publicly. |
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#62
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On Aug 20, 8:52*am, "Chess One" wrote:
One remarkable fact of language acquisition I just read about is from Hampton Sides, writing on Kit Carson. He says Carson had about 10 languages which he spoke /very/ well, but was an illiterate! He could hardly read in English. But he mastered 6 native languages, including the somewhat universal Navajo. What I find most interesting is how the Andes mountains were moved northward, across central America to where the Rockies used to stand. Indeed, the multitude of "Andean" languages is akin to the many tribes we stole our country from-- each with its own unique language. What did you say those were called-- the many "Andean languages" you spoke of? Or did you say? (Perhaps you are stuck here, like those miners who could not find a way to instruct aborigines to collect only "yellow" rocks, because they had no word for yellow and could not grasp it.) I know what many folks must be thinking: that the reason Dr. IMnes cannot name these many "Andean languages" is because they don't exist! But that would be a grave error; it is only a bashful reluctance to display his quite vast -- to say the least -- knowledge in linguistics that holds our man back; he is not one to boast, or make such brazen displays of great intellect, unless absolutely necessary. Indeed, one can see the same attribute on any other forum, such as for instance the Shakespeare newsgroup, where Dr. IMnes did not wish to attest to his great achievements in the realms of chess, but had to have them /dragged out of him/ by a very determined Neil Brennen. -- help bot |
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#63
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"help bot" wrote in message ... On Aug 20, 8:37 am, "Chess One" wrote: Its okay to say 'don't know' or even 'most likely' but to not know and be sure at the same time is not a happy combination. What we want is qualified information or qualified guesses. In other words, relative statements not absolute ones. Okay, I am watching a "lecture" on DVD, being delivered by a supposedly top-1% of all Ivy Leaguer professors, and he flatly states that "you can't use X to try and answer questions of type Y". Trouble is, you *can*, and I already have! So, what is his beef with using X in relation to Y? ** Yes, the method is all, and 'top' people, especially academics, have better opportunity to tell us method, since that is the presumption on their employment. To be only told something, rather than have the decision process explained, is merely rote learning, and in fact you cannot determine if what you are told is correct or not - not to any degree - and not so that you can objectify result by comparing it with your own process. Strictly speaking, results are part of process, but somewhere near the end of the process. In the age of sound-bite [byte?] people therefore know much, understand little. He is obviously /shielding a weakness/; it is **Maybe lazy - or merely presenting results to research which exists elsewhere? The point being the reader/audience can determine little verity from results alone. Philosophically what is not going on here is 'transference' in the sense of sharing the means of inquiry. **Feynman is a good example in mathematics of uncritically acceping the collected received opinion of 50 years of authorities. More recently in physics there is the infamous announced result of : cold fusion in a test-tube. akin to a player who will lock up as many pawns as possible, because he is tired of hanging pieces to unexpected forks by the opponent's Queen. **certainly akin to the danger of rote memorised moves alone. Without understanding the process of developing the whole team in such-and-such a formation, then the individual moves may be known, but not understood. As such, it is not a discussion of how we know what we know - which is itself a scientific phrase to do with research. He, in fact, discusses nothing whatever. Hmm. If it's the prize money that's at issue, then there ought to have been no tiebreaks-- they just split it. But if there is a trophy (or title) at stake (i.e. "dead last finisher"), then there has to be some sort of tiebreak or else you have to get out a chainsaw. **reporting on the subject is less than informative. Wall shows prize money awarded, but oddly not to 7th & 8th places. Similarly, in charts of the tournament the top 8 places are shown with Lasker always in 8th position even though from his score he might sometimes we included as 7th? This is surely the result of one source repeating another, over and over. [I note Wiki places him in 8th place.] It doesn't prove anything, either way. **But that's not why Our Taylor is inistent that it does prove something. Even before the placement issue at Nottingham arose, another poster contested that Lasker was not on top of his game at the end of his carear and said that he finished 8th etc - Our Taylor took great exception to the contradiction of Lasker's actual performance. I then picked up the most relevant Encyclopedia to hand, whcih was the British one by Sunnucks, and there was Hooper saying 8th place. **Now, without knowing if Hooper was right or wrong, Our Taylor then became excited to the degree that he is prepared to call me insane for citing an encylopedia. His own citation is of the tournament book which he hotly obtained from UK, but which did /not/ illustrate means of placement. But obviously, Our Taylor's strong reaction is /not/ to the encyclopedia entry, but to the refutation of Lasker's world status as proposed by Our Taylor, whether Lasker finished 7th or 8th. And that is the context for everything, including inventing my opinion for me. Its as daft as continuing to write about Morphy's shoes Laugh - I walk 5 miles a day, minimum, and one of my kids started her PhD this week. Is it perhaps a PhD in law, "taken from" the Sorbonne? (They never recovered the one Dr. Alekhine stole from them, you know.) **No, no that sort of law. Perhaps scientific law of sorts. At one time study of both Physics and Nature was called "Natural Philosophy". They have been not exactly divorced, but definitely experiencing a trial-seperation since the onset of the Industrial Age. An interesting synopsis of the subject is the 1991 title by Rupert Sheldrake: The Rebirth of Nature; The Greening of Science and God. As if, you know, there was one operating system for the Cosmos, and our Universe suggested that the Nature of Man, the Nature of Nature, and the Nature of God, also share one Operating System. Very much of this title points to the dead-end result of received knowledge, which is seen to be merely rule-of-thumb conveniences fitting only some circumstances, and not addressing the whole, though presuming to do so. **The rule of pedants, especially literary ones, is the story of our modern age - if I can date that to the emergence of the printing press, and the contrary instinct from such as Galileo's preference for observation before thought. Indeed, this hidden animus of singular insistences was noted early, and also its natu No-one who sees the iconoclasts raging thus against wood and stone would doubt that there is a spirit hidden in them which is death-dealing, not life-giving, and which at the first opportunity will also kill men. //Martin Luther, 1525. **At about the same time Henry VIII was destroying the integrated means of knowledge in destroying the English monasteries - which certainly provided greater emphasis to how we know things, and their meaning to us, than what succeeded that; a simple quantification of result which is the modus of our current age. [I hasten to stress that Our Taylor is not responsible for all of this! Merely responsive to it, and that, alas, is 'normative'.] Phil Innes -- help bot |
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#64
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"help bot" wrote in message ... On Aug 20, 3:20 pm, "Chess One" wrote: **The point is not to argue 'authorities' but on veracities - how do we know that anyone got it right? That is the only issue here. To be sure of things takes more than a list of 'authorities' and calling those who have other opinion, or who simply are not convinced 'insane'. Quite right old chap. **Bill Wall may often be criticized because he does not hide his opinion with his words. To avoid being criticized one should be Vague, then no one can tell if we are right or wrong - and we place ourselves beyond criticism. The only drawback with Vaguery is that nothing is revealed, which is to place oneself beyond notice. Mr./Dr./IM Innes: please read the top link in Mr. Kingston's last post before attempting to address the issue of Mr. Wall's credibility. I know it is painful to face the music, but The Great Pedant Edward Winter does not just make stuff up. It appears that Mr. Wall just spews nonsense at times, even committing atrocious spelling errors (gasp!) and aping silly stories, much like the Evans ratpackers. This is *not* a question of daring to state one's opinions-- you have intellectually "derailed". **I said Bill Wall is not 'daring', but 'able' to say... Dr. n-IMnes is too much like Dr. Nimo, and besides, authorities... authorities everywhere! Like flies round our eyes, dirty flies who need us more than we need them! In The Story of the Great Pedant, part deux; he, who after 2 years issued forth with so many mistakes the publication needed to be reprinted, the sacrificial victim to error became the printer. Mere human beings are often wrong, pedants never. Being right or wrong is always possible in a relative-universe, but that is not to frame the issue well. What is actually interesting is not even the absolutism of right or wrong, but the degree anyone can explain /how/ some part of what they espouse is right, or at least produces their result. Phil Innes -- help bot |
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#65
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wrote in message ... **Our Taylor prefers the Oxford encyclopedia To Bill Wall, I certainly do. whose idea of accuracy was to describe Boris Gulko as being away from chess, when he and his wife were being beaten up by KGB. Really, Phil? I believe your erstwhile friend Bill Hyde (or perhaps it was Larry Tapper) pointed out that the time period referred to in that OC passage did *_not_* correspond to the time Gulko was persecuted. But of course such inconvenient facts don't concern you. **There you go again! "Pointed out" facts too precious to repeat! But that is a diversion and not exactly the frame that Larry Parr offered you, which was to ask if you personally thought the entry fair, from whatever basis of knowledge or interest you had? You always seem a bit evasive on these Soviets subjects - but I give you the main thing below - since in fact you challenge me to it. **The point is not to argue 'authorities' but on veracities - how do we know that anyone got it right? Well, Phil, you might start by conceding some credibility to what the actual tournament book of Nottingham 1936 says. **Which is? Says about what? Come on!@ 35 tries and you're out! On the subject of the Nottingham 1936 tournament, I would call that an authoritative source. That is the only issue here. To be sure of things takes more than a list of 'authorities' and calling those who have other opinion, or who simply are not convinced 'insane'. To be sure of things certainly takes more than the muddled thought processes of Phil Innes. **More vagueness? I am muddled because you are sure but present no evidence to refute Hooper, who I presume is also muddled and insane? I see Bill Wall has now joined the crew. **Bill Wall may often be criticized because he does not hide his opinion with his words. Bill Wall is often criticized because he often reports arrant nonsense as fact. **From the general to the specific, then? To avoid being criticized one should be Vague, That's why I tend to be quite specific. But of course in Phil's Newspeak, to be specific is to be vague, if the specific statement is not what he wants to hear. **Our Taylor is now psychic and knows what I want to hear. He even foretells it, telling me I hold an opinion I do not, but fails to be 'quite specific' enough to quote my opinion back at me. At no time is he quite specific enough to mention what I did say, which is that I don't know for sure from what I have read if an error was made by Hooper and his editors. then no one can tell if we are right or wrong - and we place ourselves beyond criticism. Yes, Phil, we all know that no matter what the facts, you consider yourself beyond criticism. **To be 'quite specific' in this instance of these /particular/ facts, you now tell me that I think my question about knowing what is true is 'beyond criticism?' The only drawback with Vaguery is that nothing is revealed, which is to place oneself beyond notice. Phil Innes Phil, the plain fact is that in the area of chess history, you are pretty much a nincompoop. Everyone else here knows that. I suspect you do do too, but of course you dare not admit it publicly. **Let's be 'quite specific! Does everybody know you asked me about Soviet Cheating? Do they know because you accused me of knowing Russian players since I evidently did. Does everybody know the /specific/ was about Averbakh's role in Soviet chess organisation? Do they know I obtained you 2 Russian references which admitted that he might not tell the truth? Do they know that after you received that information you neglected to ask Averbakh a pertinent question about it? Do they know that instead you attacked Larry Evans about his own sources, interpretations, while neglecting to provide your own quite specific questions when you had the opportunity to do so? Do they know that you then told me my opinion that I would 'jumped at' the chance to interview him? Do they know that after this more than somewhat duplitious inquiry Evans and Averbakh on Soviet cheating, as explored in this very newsgroup at great length, you then admitted you would 'under prepared'. Do they know that is not strictly true - but you rather selected from your preparations to edit the issue out. **And do they know that this would otherwise be just a hill of beans by someone doing a celebity interview, rather than historical interview EXCEPT that you made such a fuss in Evan's face, preferring, so it seems, the guy who the 2 Russians rather doubted, and who Boris Gulko specifically mentioned, to the views of the 5 time US Champions own /experience/? Phil Innes |
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#66
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On Aug 21, 9:56*am, "Chess One" wrote:
wrote in message * Well, Phil, you might start by conceding some credibility to what the actual tournament book of Nottingham 1936 says. **Which is? Says about what? Come on!@ 35 tries and you're out! Phil, you have this preposterous habit of pretending a question has not been answered. You ask, say, "Who was the first President of the United States." I reply "George Washington," citing several authoritative sources. Then you spend innumerable posts pretending I have not answered the question, presented no evidence, etc. Do you realize how foolish that makes you look? Apparently not, or else you enjoy being foolish. Yet again, the Nottingham tournament book is _the_ authoritative source on a matter you've belabored here off and on for at least a year: where Lasker stood in the final standings at Nottingham 1936. You keep supporting the Sunnucks encyclopaedia's statement that he was sole 8th. Whereas the tournament book clearly shows him tied for 7th and 8th places with Salo Flohr. End of story. I have two copies of the Nottingham 1936 book. Shall I send you one? Then you can see for yourself. Alas, I suspect you will just continue as you have always done. |
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#67
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On Aug 20, 6:08 pm, wrote:
Bill Wall? Bill Wall?? ROFLMAO! Bill Wall is one of the most careless, most inaccurate writers who ever said a word about chess. For examples of his studious scholarship, I commend you to these links: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/e...edibility.html http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/fun.html Bill Wall. Lord, I can't stop chuckling. Innes had found his ideal. Wall is pretty ridiculous, confusing say, Wolfgang Pauli with Wolfgang Pauly. Does he work as a fact-checker for Chessvile? |
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#68
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On Aug 20, 7:37 am, "Chess One" wrote:
I think No you don't, that is the problem. You spew forth without thinking. |
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#69
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Chess One wrote:
** Yes, the method is all, and 'top' people, especially academics, have better opportunity to tell us method, since that is the presumption on their employment. To be only told something, rather than have the decision process explained, is merely rote learning, and in fact you cannot determine if what you are told is correct or not - not to any degree - and not so that you can objectify result by comparing it with your own process. Strictly speaking, results are part of process, but somewhere near the end of the process. In the age of sound-bite [byte?] people therefore know much, understand little. What process did you follow to reach these conclusions? -- 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/ |
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#70
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On Aug 21, 8:42*am, "Chess One" wrote:
* He is obviously /shielding a weakness/; it is **Maybe lazy - or merely presenting results to research which exists elsewhere? Um, no. The point being the reader/audience can determine little verity from results alone. Philosophically what is not going on here is 'transference' in the sense of sharing the means of inquiry. In this case, there was a decided *avoidance* of "inquiry"; you see, there was a war going on, between science and religion. This insistence that X cannot be used with regard to Y is a truce of sorts, or maybe a buffer zone having mainly to do with the war. **Feynman is a good example in mathematics of uncritically acceping the collected received opinion of 50 years of authorities. To heck with him then! Why can't he be more like me, and carefully scrutinize the claims of these "authorities", instead of blindly accepting them? More recently in physics there is the infamous announced result of : cold fusion in a test-tube. Already tried. The glass tube becomes brittle, and prone to shattering easily. As for the "fusion", it smells like sulfur and tastes like onion. **certainly akin to the danger of rote memorised moves alone. Without understanding the process of developing the whole team in such-and-such a formation, then the individual moves may be known, but not understood. Precisely. I recently lost a game due to making two horrific tactical blunders in a row, yet my opponent remained convinced that I had gone awry in the opening-- because my early moves did not precisely match those in his books! As can easily be seen by objective examination, his conception was wrong; computer analysis shows that my loss was almost entirely due to those tactical blunders, which were so severe that I am shown to come out a full Queen down! As such, it is not a discussion of how we know what we know - which is itself a scientific phrase to do with research. He, in fact, discusses nothing whatever. That will be one of my next projects; I am especially interested in why, after careful definition of science as X, certain alleged scientists made reckless assumptions and were given a free pass, when others would have automatically have been termed pseudo-scientists or even hacks. **Now, without knowing if Hooper was right or wrong, Our Taylor then became excited to the degree that he is prepared to call me insane for citing an encylopedia. His own citation is of the tournament book which he hotly obtained from UK, but which did /not/ illustrate means of placement. But obviously, Our Taylor's strong reaction is /not/ to the encyclopedia entry, but to the refutation of Lasker's world status as proposed by Our Taylor, whether Lasker finished 7th or 8th. And that is the context for everything, including inventing my opinion for me. Whew. I have discovered that sometimes Mr. Kingston gets an idea from a dubious source, then sticks to it like a pig-headed mule. One example was where he lifted the phrase "not in the top 50" from Mark Crowther, regarding Mr. Alekhine near the end of his career. * Is it perhaps a PhD in law, "taken from" the Sorbonne? *(They never recovered the one Dr. Alekhine stole from them, you know.) **No, no that sort of law. Perhaps scientific law of sorts. At one time study of both Physics and Nature was called "Natural Philosophy". They have been not exactly divorced, but definitely experiencing a trial-seperation since the onset of the Industrial Age. An interesting synopsis of the subject is the 1991 title by Rupert Sheldrake: The Rebirth of Nature; The Greening of Science and God. As if, you know, there was one operating system for the Cosmos, and our Universe suggested that the Nature of Man, the Nature of Nature, and the Nature of God, also share one Operating System. Very much of this title points to the dead-end result of received knowledge, which is seen to be merely rule-of-thumb conveniences fitting only some circumstances, and not addressing the whole, though presuming to do so. There are many "courses" on this subject from which to choose-- some fitting the category of science and some fitting religion, or even both. **The rule of pedants, especially literary ones, is the story of our modern age - if I can date that to the emergence of the printing press, and the contrary instinct from such as Galileo's preference for observation before thought. Indeed, this hidden animus of singular insistences was noted early, and also its natu * * No-one who sees the iconoclasts raging thus against wood * * and stone would doubt that there is a spirit hidden in * * them which is death-dealing, not life-giving, and which at * * the first opportunity will also kill men. * * * * //Martin Luther, 1525. Not all of these "scientists" placed so heavy a weighting on objective observation. In fact, many sought to incorporate flawed thinking into their "revolutionary" ideas, not reject and reformulate from scratch to simply match the data. **At about the same time Henry VIII was destroying the integrated means of knowledge in destroying the English monasteries - which certainly provided greater emphasis to how we know things, and their meaning to us, than what succeeded that; a simple quantification of result which is the modus of our current age. [I hasten to stress that Our Taylor is not responsible for all of this! Merely responsive to it, and that, alas, is 'normative'.] So then, Mr. Kingston is not accountable for this alleged destruction of knowledge, perpetrated by the sinister Henry five-one- one-one. (I once knew a fellow from the Borg, with a somewhat similar name.) I've read similar-sounding accounts on the Web, but it seems to me that since we have no way of knowing what would have happened otherwise, the claims to "protection of knowledge" by the church are specious. Can it be demonstrated for a fact that they did more protecting and promoting overall, than they did of the opposite? How so? Without the oppression of certain forces, knowledge has often sprung up from out of the blue, and it is impossible to calculate where or when. I note that /even today/, there are such oppressive forces hard at work. The Ivy- leaguer of whom I wrote earlier, often feels compelled to stop in mid-course to address these issues. The war continues... . -- help bot |
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