Author: Dann Corbit
Date: 14:53:39 01/25/02
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On January 25, 2002 at 17:49:13, Albert Silver wrote: [snip] >I disagree. Two things: Heinz's study showed that adding plies doesn't linearly >add strength. Second, I think the comparison with Kasparov is amiss. Kasparov >does far more than calculate plies, and he would bring that with him in any >game. You can take a dry middlegame with no magic ruptures or sacrfices, and >Kasparov might tell you in a second that it is a draw. Why? Not because he >calculated it to the last ply, but because his judgement and vision allow him to >make that assessment. I do not believe for one second that perfect play would >suddenly change that. The perfect player might know that h4 and an enormous >number of useless moves can or will lead to a loss, but that doesn't mean >Kasparov will play them. I think it's hero worship. If you take a 2400 player against Kasparov, and the 2400 player is going to get slaughtered for the very reasons that you mention. If you take a 3200 player against Kasparov, Kasparov will look just as bad as the 2400 player did. Deep Blue, the second version, made Kasparov look almost human. A computer that searched 500 times deeper would humble Kasparov. I believe it would win 1000 out of 1000 games with no draws. I think most openings have some small bugs in them. Probably mainly undiscovered and it will take centuries to discover them. A perfect player, by definition makes no mistakes. If there is a move that is one trillionth of a pawn better than any others, then he takes it. If there is any way to lose at all during any move of the game, then it will occur playing against the perfect player.
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