![]() |
| 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: comment, edward, strange, winter |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 15, 4:38 pm, " wrote:
But at one point in the book Kasparov attempts to quote Capablanca: 'I see only one move ahead, but it is always the correct one.' And Winter comments: 'No source is given, of course, because none is known...The quote should have been expunged!? I think that is a bit drastic. -- offramp No evidence Capa didn't say it either. Contrary to the dynamic duo of Winter and Kingston, it IS drastic to suggest it be expunged from Kasparov's book. GM Larry Evans usually puts it this way: "When asked how far he saw ahead, the mightly Capablanca reputedly said: 'Only one move. The best one.'" Precisely. It is just plain silly to maintain that Jose Capablanca "never said" anything like this (unless of course it is the ghost of JC making such a claim). No one could possibly know everything ever said (or not said) by someone else, unless they are connected at the hip and always awake at the same time; it is also essential that the Siamese twin be a *superb listener*. What Larry Evans treated as an anecdote, Gary Kasparov rendered as a quotation, and that is where Edward Winter jumped in with a correction. What is learned here is that the standards of GK are rather low; he feels that whatever he may render off-the-cuff is worthy of attribution to others, since of course he is an infallible genius, sent here to save the world. In sharp contrast, Edward Winter follows the conventional thinking that "quotations" ought to have real sources, that they ought to be rendered identically as in the source, and what's more, that the source be specified so it can be checked and verified by mere mortals. These kinds of problems often arise when the gods try to converse with their vast inferiors. In this case, a chess match between GK and EW would settle the matter; we would soon learn that EW has no "source" for some of his chess moves; that they are erroneous and based on a shallow approach which fails to account for tricky tactics that only the chess gods can see. Seriously though, it appears that Mr. Kasparov's writing skills need sharpening; he is getting a bit sloppy. There simply is no excuse for a former world champion to make the sort of mistakes which can be spotted easily by any random chess historian. People who write a lot of chess books would do well to learn from GK's elementary blunder. -- help bot |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 15, 4:38*pm, " wrote:
So Kasparov's "quote" fails on all three counts. I'd hardly consider it "wacky" to point this out. -- Taylor Kingston No evidence Capa didn't say it either. Jeez, Larry, this is dumb even for you, and especially embarrassing for a guy who tries to pass himself off as an expert in logic. By that standard, Kasparov could with equal validity have attributed the quote to Socrates, Atilla the Hun, or Shirley Temple. Or to anyone. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 16, 8:08 am, Taylor Kingston wrote:
Jeez, Larry, this is dumb even for you Nonsense; if you adjust your dubth-detector to LP's subterranean level, you will see that this is about middle-of-the-road for him. and especially embarrassing for a guy who tries to pass himself off as an expert in logic. By that standard, Kasparov could with equal validity have attributed the quote to Socrates, Atilla the Hun, or Shirley Temple. Or to anyone. Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. "A titanic waste of time-- like listening to the babblings of Sophists." What amazes me is that according to the report by Larry Parr, Larry Evans got it right, while Gary Kasparov goofed! (What does this tell us about GK's standards, if he can be bested by the likes of LE?) Really TK, you do realize that it is ridiculous to assert that "no source exists" instead of recognizing that GK's source was one or more of the anecdotes which have appeared countless times in the press? It's all a mountainous molehill, in which GK made the mistake of "quoting" an anecdote from memory. Edward Winter's need to demonstrate just how superior he is resulted in bulldozers being called up from as far away as China for this job. "Higher!", the man kept shouting. "Make a mountain out of it! A TALL mountain! -- help bot |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 16, 9:54*am, help bot wrote:
* Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. To paraphrase LP, there's no evidence that he didn't! ;-) |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ... On Jan 16, 9:54 am, help bot wrote: Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. To paraphrase LP, there's no evidence that he didn't! ;-) ---- Taylor - the /biggest/ resentment of Winter is that he bitches on utterly inconsequential trivium of Greats - even when he is wrong! Winter is logically wrong - not factually wrong - and therefore specially stubborn in correcting himself. ))You have taken to defending his logical error in Winter's thought here by rubbishing someone who points it out - - since after all, the decent thing would have been for him to improve the statement, and accommodate his /own objection/ by adding those two words, 'possibly apochryphal,' rather than this vainglorious pedantry. Just because the source is not written, does not mean it was not said, and that does not mean that it didn't happen, and there is no reason it should be 'expunged'. There is not the slightest written proof in his own hand that Shakespeare composed his Works. Should that too be expunged? A basis for making statements therefore simply needs to have a /qualification/ attached, rather than destroying the materials as unprovenanced. If Winter wants to write about /our/ social history in chess, then I do hope that his is not the standard that is employed. In fact it rather diminishes him, and thus disqualifies him from the /social/ duty of interacting with others in a reasonable way on what is, after all, a socially owned product. Instead he veres the other way and takes to copyrighting public property. Simply indicating that the source was uncertain is sufficient. Since's Winter's English is better than Kasparov's, then let him deploy his own wit, rather than this endless carping on the supposed absense and deficiencies of others. Do /you/ understand the difference between expunging unprovenanced material and simply qualifying it with a reservation? So much history and anthropology resolves around these matters, including that what is written can also be false - and just because Nennius said it, don't make it so. Whereas what Caedmon said, we don't really know, since Bede thought the Anglo Saxon too racy, so gave it to us in Latin. I merely appeal to you to socialise all these histories out of warring camps of champions - but especially to take a deeper look at the scope of what they report, and even if it hits the center of the target? Phil Innes |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 16, 11:04 am, "Chess One" wrote:
"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ... On Jan 16, 9:54 am, help bot wrote: Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. To paraphrase LP, there's no evidence that he didn't! ;-) ---- Taylor - the /biggest/ resentment of Winter is that he bitches on utterly inconsequential trivium of Greats - even when he is wrong! Winter is logically wrong - not factually wrong - and therefore specially stubborn in correcting himself. ))You have taken to defending his logical error in Winter's thought here by rubbishing someone who points it out - - since after all, the decent thing would have been for him to improve the statement, and accommodate his /own objection/ by adding those two words, 'possibly apochryphal,' rather than this vainglorious pedantry. P Innes expects Mr. Winter to run around with a pen correcting by hand every copy of Kasparov's book?!? Just because the source is not written, does not mean it was not said, and that does not mean that it didn't happen, and there is no reason it should be 'expunged'. What records do we have that the alleged Capablanca remark was spoken? Who has reported the words being said? There is not the slightest written proof in his own hand that Shakespeare composed his Works. No, but there's a sizable amount of evidence he did 'compose' the Shakespeare canon. Should that too be expunged? A basis for making statements therefore simply needs to have a /qualification/ attached, rather than destroying the materials as unprovenanced. If Winter wants to write about /our/ social history in chess, then I do hope that his is not the standard that is employed. In fact it rather diminishes him, and thus disqualifies him from the /social/ duty of interacting with others in a reasonable way on what is, after all, a socially owned product. Instead he veres the other way and takes to copyrighting public property. Simply indicating that the source was uncertain is sufficient. Since's Winter's English is better than Kasparov's, then let him deploy his own wit, rather than this endless carping on the supposed absense and deficiencies of others. Do /you/ understand the difference between expunging unprovenanced material and simply qualifying it with a reservation? So much history and anthropology resolves around these matters, including that what is written can also be false - and just because Nennius said it, don't make it so. Whereas what Caedmon said, we don't really know, since Bede thought the Anglo Saxon too racy, so gave it to us in Latin. I merely appeal to you to socialise all these histories out of warring camps of champions - but especially to take a deeper look at the scope of what they report, and even if it hits the center of the target? Phil Innes |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
"The Historian" wrote in message ... On Jan 16, 11:04 am, "Chess One" wrote: "Taylor Kingston" wrote in message ... On Jan 16, 9:54 am, help bot wrote: Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. To paraphrase LP, there's no evidence that he didn't! ;-) ---- Taylor - the /biggest/ resentment of Winter is that he bitches on utterly inconsequential trivium of Greats - even when he is wrong! Winter is logically wrong - not factually wrong - and therefore specially stubborn in correcting himself. ))You have taken to defending his logical error in Winter's thought here by rubbishing someone who points it out - - since after all, the decent thing would have been for him to improve the statement, and accommodate his /own objection/ by adding those two words, 'possibly apochryphal,' rather than this vainglorious pedantry. P Innes expects Mr. Winter to run around with a pen correcting by hand every copy of Kasparov's book?!? The usual immature tripe from one Neil Brennan. Winter already runs around carping about 'corrections' which are not 'corrections' at all. They would provide further information to the quotation. Expunging materials being not the same as correcting them - except perhaps if your name is Brennan or Blair. Just because the source is not written, does not mean it was not said, and that does not mean that it didn't happen, and there is no reason it should be 'expunged'. What records do we have that the alleged Capablanca remark was spoken? Who has reported the words being said? There is not the slightest written proof in his own hand that Shakespeare composed his Works. No, but there's a sizable amount of evidence he did 'compose' the Shakespeare canon. That's right! But Winter would expunge even a Shakespeare on this basis. But I ask Taylor Kingston a question here, since he is at least already up to speed, and besides, while we may not agree, I do not call him fatuous. I hope he will not evade the issue, since as below, it is /our/ chess history, and it is our due diligence to assess if its writ fair or not. That does not mean that anyone is exempt from criticism, neither Kasparov nor Winter. Phil Innes Should that too be expunged? A basis for making statements therefore simply needs to have a /qualification/ attached, rather than destroying the materials as unprovenanced. If Winter wants to write about /our/ social history in chess, then I do hope that his is not the standard that is employed. In fact it rather diminishes him, and thus disqualifies him from the /social/ duty of interacting with others in a reasonable way on what is, after all, a socially owned product. Instead he veres the other way and takes to copyrighting public property. Simply indicating that the source was uncertain is sufficient. Since's Winter's English is better than Kasparov's, then let him deploy his own wit, rather than this endless carping on the supposed absense and deficiencies of others. Do /you/ understand the difference between expunging unprovenanced material and simply qualifying it with a reservation? So much history and anthropology resolves around these matters, including that what is written can also be false - and just because Nennius said it, don't make it so. Whereas what Caedmon said, we don't really know, since Bede thought the Anglo Saxon too racy, so gave it to us in Latin. I merely appeal to you to socialise all these histories out of warring camps of champions - but especially to take a deeper look at the scope of what they report, and even if it hits the center of the target? Phil Innes |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 16, 11:04*am, "Chess One" wrote:
"Taylor Kingston" wrote in message Ah, but Socrates did not play chess. * To paraphrase LP, there's no evidence that he didn't! ;-) You have taken to defending his logical error in Winter's thought here Actually, Phil, I'm not really interested in or trying to defend Winter in this particular instance. I largely agree with the OP, Offramp, that Winter's insistence on "expungement" is making too much of this. A minor rephrasing would have been adequate. However, I did think it worthwhile to note what real evidence Winter had published about the actual provenance of this apocryphal and/or misattributed statement. by rubbishing someone who points it out - - All I'm "rubbishing" here, Phil, is LP's puerile 'But there's no proof Capa didn't say it!' comment. It was Offramp who first pointed out Winter's statement, and I did not "rubbish" him. |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jan 16, 12:35 pm, "Chess One" wrote:
"The Historian" wrote in message Just because the source is not written, does not mean it was not said, and that does not mean that it didn't happen, and there is no reason it should be 'expunged'. What records do we have that the alleged Capablanca remark was spoken? Who has reported the words being said? There is not the slightest written proof in his own hand that Shakespeare composed his Works. No, but there's a sizable amount of evidence he did 'compose' the Shakespeare canon. That's right! But Winter would expunge even a Shakespeare on this basis. My apologies to the newsgroup for not catching the flaw in your argument that allowed you to practice your "fact-kitting" once again. Comparing the authenticity of the alleged Capablanca remark to the documentation establishing authorship of the Shakespeare canon is a highly flawed analogy. A better one is to compare the alleged Capa remark to one of the legends of Shakespeare, such as the well-worn story of Shakespeare holding horses outside a theater. Most biographers mention the horse-holding without putting much stock in its authenticity. However, the horse-holding story is at least specific to Shakespeare. The alleged Capa quotation is one that gets assigned to different speakers as needed, which was Winter's point. The initial post in this thread, for instance, attributed the quotation to another speaker. If we must suggest an improvement to Kasparov's prose, I second David Richerby's contribution. |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| The Devil's Disciple | parrthenon@cs.com | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 208 | November 24th 07 01:42 AM |
| The Devil's Disciple | parrthenon@cs.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 206 | November 24th 07 01:42 AM |
| Edward G. Winter from Wikipedia | Sam Sloan | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 60 | March 10th 06 11:46 PM |
| Edward G. Winter from Wikipedia | Sam Sloan | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 64 | March 10th 06 11:46 PM |
| Edward G. Winter from Wikipedia | Sam Sloan | alt.chess (Alternative Chess Group) | 71 | March 10th 06 11:46 PM |