ReneDescartes wrote on 11/25/14 at 14:02:41:
but the point he raises is fascinating, and I would pay money to hear examples of the different approach to analysis that Aronian is talking about.
i assume you are referring to Ken Regan' analysis as your later post indicates. Query whether the findings can be extrapolated to your conclusion? i am no mathematician and hence cannot really comment on Regan's study and design. perhaps you can comment?
re computer generation vs Kasparov-Anand generation, query, using a tennis analogy, is it comparable to the divide between Sampras-Agassi generation vs Federer-Nadal generation? Again I am no tennis expert but from reading some commentary, there is quite a difference in style and play?
Re chess engines and style of play, can someone who actually know engines comment on this: Using engines to check a game and moves, is this the same as using an engine to actually play a game? If there is a difference in how an engine would conduct the game from move 1, i.e. the different pathways, then engines are different from humans. It is not just a matter of strength, brute calculation (millions of processing moves per second kind of thing), is it? I frequently (increasingly in recent times) read GM commentators who says, "of course, humans will never play this way" etc. Are they intuitively saying something with a kernel of truth of it is a mere rhetorical flash?
Sorry, I have more questions than answers but the questions are fascinating.
I will try to remember (but memory is very tricky at my age!) and dig up an example and perhaps we can use as a "concrete" example for discussion. Or does anyone have a concrete example of a engine move (which is good move) which no human will play?