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Subject: Re: Bravery or cowardice?

Author: Dann Corbit

Date: 08:52:25 05/19/00

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On May 19, 2000 at 11:24:03, Albert Silver wrote:
[snip]
>Really? You think that if I were to try to qualify for the Olympic 100m dash by
>inscribing a slow remote controlled 10 cc motorbike that could go at 5 mph tops,
>the competitors would have no problem with this? Everyone would give me the
>thumbs up? You can organize races with such participations, and have the bike
>win or lose, but are you going to declare the bike a national champion if it
>wins? Not at all, you'll just register the result, note the progress of machines
>in the area and that's it. Maybe get a nice newspaper piece if you're lucky, but
>so what?

When I think of it, I am sure that you are right about that one.  In fact, there
are lots of mechanical devices you can put on runners that really would make
them faster or better but we don't.  I'm really not sure why that is, but I
suppose it has something to do with nostalgia.

>Computers and thus the programs, are getting there, and there is no question
>about it. Now we are waiting for entry-level PC programs to to reach GM level,
>or at least have it generally recognized. Soon, it will be 2600 I guess, and
>then even more. Eventually, programs won't even have to be as specialized
>state-of-the-art programming in order to beat the best of us. Fine. I have NO
>doubts about it, and any concern I have isn't whether they are stronger, but on
>the future of my passion as openings really are overanalyzed, killing much of
>the real adventure and discovery.

Here, I am fairly sure that you are exactly wrong.  That's because you don't
know how large the canvas is.  The advances from human learning will continue to
outstrip those from computer learning for years to come.  Look at the chess
played today verses back in Paul Morphy's day.  The rules were very nearly the
same, but many openings that were thought to be sound have been busted and many
new openings have been discovered.  Are these discoveries bad?  Should we still
be playing the old, busted openings in blissful ignorance?

Chess is a search for a level playing field.  If one opening has a decisive
advantage for either player, people will stop using it.  If it is an advantage
for your opponent, you will obviously aim for something else because you will
have become aware of that.  If we discovered a million new openings a year, it
would be thousands of centuries before we even uncovered the tip of the iceberg.

Real adventure and discovery can come from humans or computers.  What we will
see is more and more adventure and discovery, not less and less.

>Fritz could very well be the absolute best.
>Unbeatable, unstoppable, a steam-roller. I still wouldn't make it national
>champion. I just don't understand the point. You can measure it, and it can
>outperform us, but that doesn't mean it is competing. It is a machine, that's
>it.

It enters a contest.  It wins or loses.  That's competing.

>I'm into computers, chess, and chess programs as much as the next, and never
>cease to be amazed at how things have evolved, but this makes no sense to me.
>Really not.

I don't think it has to make sense to you.  For me, I want to see the best chess
possible from whatever source.  Whether it is Kasparov or Deep Blue or Crafty on
a 10,000 node Beowulf cluster, I don't care much.

The reasons I think machines should be allowed are manyfold.
1.  Have the best play the best, whatever that is.
2.  Chess is not as interesting to the general public as it once was
3.  The "John Henry" thing
4.  It gives people something interesting to talk about
5.  If faced with a challenge that is undecided, I would like to see it finished

I really, honestly don't think your objection about national champion is why we
truly don't want them in the contests.  If, for instance, we let them compete,
but the results did not count and they could not get any prize money, I still
think people would object.  It's fear of the machine.  There are poems and
stories about our fear of mechanization.  James Thurber's works are wrought
through and through with it, and that stuff was written decades ago.

If a machine cannot be national or world champion, the single real reason for
that is fear.  And if it is better than the human, with or without a tag
proclaiming it champion, it really is the champion.  We just refuse to recognize
it.  In fact, by our refusing to play, it may be champion by default.





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