Author: KarinsDad
Date: 10:56:42 06/14/00
Go up one level in this thread
On June 14, 2000 at 13:23:19, Hans Gerber wrote: >On June 14, 2000 at 11:54:38, KarinsDad wrote: > >>On June 13, 2000 at 19:57:39, Mogens Larsen wrote: >> >>>On June 13, 2000 at 19:18:45, Dann Corbit wrote: >>> >>>> And even the opening database data (while - admittedly - more important than >>>>endgame tablebase data) is not the achilles' heel. If you want to strike at the >>>>heart of a chess program, simply remove the data from the eval function. Now >>>>we'll see who plays crappy chess. Essentially, what you will have is my >>>>retarded move generator chess program. The GM's won't have much problem with >>>>that, but neither will anyone else for that matter. >>> >>>You still don't get it. It's not a question of crippling a chess program, not as >>>far as I'm concerned, and it involves other considerations than the simple ones >>>you present. Of course a human brain is responsible for the code involved in a >>>chess program and the same thing applies for opening books and endgames tables, >>>so it has no bearing on the discussion at hand whatsoever. Opening books and >>>endgame tables are simply not a product of the programmer and rarely something >>>produced by the program itself. A chess program should play chess on its own >>>terms, not through more or less random exterior additions and attachments. You >>>might say it's a question of existentialism. What constitutes a genuine computer >>>chess program? >>> >>>Best wishes... >>>Mogens >> >>This is getting old. >> >>"Opening books and endgame tables are simply not a product of the programmer and >>rarely something produced by the program itself." >> >>RAM is not a product of the programmer and rarely something produced by the >>program itself. >> >>Hard Disks are not a product of the programmer and rarely something produced by >>the program itself. >> >>The rules of the game are not a product of the programmer and rarely something >>produced by the program itself. >> >>EGTBs and the operating system are not products of the programmer and rarely >>something produced by the program itself. >> >>Etc. Etc. Etc. >> >>I have a BUNCH of tables in my code that I wrote separate programs to generate >>since it is a pain in the butt to generate a 4K table by hand. I did not create >>them by hand, but I still created them. >> >>Every aspect of a computer program is put there by the programmer. Where the >>programmer acquires a piece of software, hardware, or data is irrelevent. It was >>the PROGRAMMER who put it all together and came up with the overall package. >> >>Not some random GM from 80 years ago who played a game. Not the customers. Not >>you. Not me. >> >>THE PROGRAMMER. >> >>Who gives a rat's rear end how he put together his program. The two important >>things for most people are: >> >>1) What features does the program have? >> >>2) How well does the program play chess? >> >>Now, these two can be segregated further such as elements of the GUI, does the >>program play a strong endgame, etc. But, the bottom line is that it does not >>matter much what elements make up the internals of a program. A given program is >>what it is and talking about whether it should have external elements such as >>opening books and endgame tables (which by the way are no different than the >>tables in my code which where generated by an external program) is kind of >>silly. >> >>This entire thread is basically ludicrous and just an exercise in jaw movement >>(or typing movement, whatever). >> >>KarinsDad :) > >Ok, as long as you want to play comp vs. comp matches this is ok. > >But please think about the following! Not even the World Champion himself does >play the whole ECO down to move 30 in less than 2 seconds. Are you really >convinced that this is a proof for the ability to "play chess"? Fair enough questions. Let me ask you some questions. 1) Does a 1400 rated human player know how to play chess? 2) Is the ability to make legal moves sufficient to be said to be playing chess? 3) If so, since computers make legal moves, do computers then know how to play chess? 4) What happens when you take the board away from the 1400 rated human player? Is he still able to play chess? What if he makes a mistake and makes an illegal move while in check? The basic point is that people can wrangle about this all day long and get nowhere. KarinsDad :)
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