Author: José de Jesús García Ruvalcaba
Date: 09:26:30 05/06/99
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On May 06, 1999 at 02:51:51, Bernhard Bauer wrote: [big snip] >As can be seen Crafty plays not better. In fact Crafty plays very "human-like". >The blunder Qxb2 (Qxb7) seems to be immortal. Kurt Richter writes in his Book >"Der Schachpraktiker" 1948 the following: > > >Unsterbliche Fehler > >Gegen Fines Fehler-Theorie spricht unter anderem >die Tatsache, dass die Fehler unsterblich sind >und sich immer wiederholen. Wir führen aus dem >reichen Material nur ein Beispiel an: das Schlagen >auf b2 (bzw. b7) mit der Dame. >1862(Breslau). Dr. Tarrasch - v. Scheve >1913(Wien). Schenkeln - Schlechter >1922(Wien). Grünfeld - Bogoljubow >1935(Moskau). Botwinnik - Spielmann >1948(Essen). Schmid - Sahlmann > > >Translation from German to English done by > http://babelfish.altavista.digital.com/cgi-bin/translate? > >Unsterbliche error > >Against Fines error theory speaks among other things >the fact that the errors are unsterblich and always >repeat themselves. We state one example from the rich >material only: striking on b2 (or b7) with the lady. >1862(Breslau). Dr. Tarrasch - v. Scheve >1913(Wien). Thighs - bad >1922(Wien). Green field - Bogoljubow >1935(Moskau). Botwinnik - play man >1948(Essen). Schmid - Sahlmann > >Even Bogoljubow and Spielmann did that blunder, so why not >Hiarcs, Crafty, etc. > >Kind regards >Bernhard >~ Perhaps Schenkeln was a speed skater, and impressed his opponents with his frog haunches; Schlechter was so bad to scare Lasker and almost take the world championship from him; while Grünfeld had a beatiful house in the country; and Spielmann was called in the late night by wealthy ladies in need of comapny (: José.
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