Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: Kortchnoi - Rechlis

Author: José Carlos

Date: 03:51:23 11/15/01

Go up one level in this thread


On November 15, 2001 at 03:35:23, Dieter Buerssner wrote:

>The end position in this game is
>
>[D] 8/8/6p1/6Q1/2K4p/6kP/5p2/8 b - - 0 55
>
>How does your engine evaluate this pos?
>
>[Event "?"]
>[Site "Beersheba ,CBM 09"]
>[Date "1988.??.??"]
>[Round "?"]
>[White "Kortchnoi, V."]
>[Black "Rechlis, G."]
>[WhiteElo "2640"]
>[BlackElo "2475"]
>[ECO "A15"]
>[Result "1/2-1/2"]
>
>1. Nf3 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 Nxd5 5. g3 Bg7 6. Bg2
>O-O 7. O-O c5 8. Qa4 Nc6 9. Qc4 Nxc3 10. bxc3 b6 11. Qh4
>Bb7 12. Rb1 e6 13. c4 Qxh4 14. Nxh4 Rab8 15. Nf3 Nb4
>16. Bb2 Rfd8 17. Bxg7 Kxg7 18. Rb2 Rd6 19. d3 Re8 20. a3
>Na6 21. Ra1 e5 22. Nd2 Bxg2 23. Kxg2 f5 24. a4 Nb4 25. a5
>Re7 26. f3 h5 27. h3 Kf6 28. axb6 axb6 29. Ra8 Rdd7 30. Rb1
>Ra7 31. Ra1 Nc6 32. Nb1 Rxa1 33. Rxa1 Ra7 34. Rxa7 Nxa7
>35. Nc3 Ke6 36. Nd5 b5 37. Nc7+ Kd7 38. Nxb5 Nxb5 39. cxb5
>Kc7 40. f4 exf4 41. gxf4 h4 42. Kf2 Kb6 43. Ke3 Kxb5
>44. Kd2 Kb4 45. Kc2 c4 46. Kb2 cxd3 47. exd3 Kc5 48. Kc3
>Kd5 49. d4 Ke4 50. Kc4 Kxf4 51. d5 Kg3 52. d6 f4 53. d7 f3
>54. d8=Q f2 55. Qg5+ 1/2-1/2

  This is the kind of position programs can chose the right moves, but don't
understand at all. My program says +7.xx for white, but it defends correctly
with black.
  I guess this position won't be solved by any program in a long time because it
requires reasoning. You can't write code for positions like this easily, because
an extra pawn here or there makes a difference. So you have to 'think'... the
magic word. The word that puts distance between GM's and programs. GM's can,
given enough time, understand _any_ position. And if they misunderstand one and
lose, the next game he'll have learned the lesson. Computers can't do such a
thing.

>Regards,
>Dieter

  Regards,

  José C.



This page took 0 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.