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Subject: The Natural Analogs of Chess

Author: Timothy J. Frohlick

Date: 06:53:13 06/10/99


As I sit watching the dust particles randomly move along a shaft of light
entering my bedroom I make the association with chess.  Particles moving close
to me represent the opening and those further away the mid game and end game.
The fan above my head rotates at a set speed but moves the pieces of dust in a
random manner.

Is computer chess a random process?  Can we solve a chaotic entity?  Clouds form
over my head in a random but semi-predictable fashion.  A bumblebee chooses
which flower to land on at random as I choose which flowers to smell at random
(the ones with no bees on them).  Grapevines branch at random as do their leaf
veins but we know it is a grapevine.

We choose chess openings at random or according to our fancies or fantasies.  As
the rain falling from the sky so it is with the chessmen.  From 32 pieces down
to two equal but opposite pieces like night and day--that is the perfect game of
chess.

Tim Frohlick, Natural Philosopher and chess player




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