I asked you who won? — MSC
I don't believe that at all. I said White statistically wins more often. The meaning of the OP is more nuanced than that. If you you go back and reread it I'm not talking about the rules of chess between two different competitors. I'm talking about the rules of playing chess with yourself and the entire thing is supposed to tell a story.Well, you framed the question in a way that suggested you were under the impression that the player playing white had an unfair advantage. No, s/he doesn't. — TheMadFool
I am not suggesting anything about the players here at all. I'm suggesting something about preference.For some reason, you've always felt it was unfair that white always gets to move first. How can that be a rule? Why is it a rule? Nevermind — MSC
I don't believe that [white has an advantage] at all. I said White statistically wins more often. — MSC
The meaning of the OP is more nuanced than that — MSC
I'm talking about the rules of playing chess with yourself and the entire thing is supposed to tell a story. — MSC
don't believe that [white has an advantage] at all. I said White statistically wins more often.
— MSC
Isn't that a contradiction? — TheMadFool
The problem lies in the rules of people and the little language games they play. — MSC
Ultimately the only way to make a game with yourself a real challenge is to play reactively, to not think multiple steps ahead but just focus on the next move. — MSC
Thinking multiple steps ahead of your opponent is the essence of chess. To not do that would be to court defeat. — TheMadFool
When your opponent is you, thinking ahead courts defeat because you've likely already decided which colour is going to win and which will lose. Meaning if you have decided that black is going to lose, you are going to lose as black. You will also win as white. You will have effectively won and lost the same game of chess. Is this even still winning?
So is it possible to play yourself at chess and still have it be called a game? Or can a game only happen between two players each with one colour, not one player with two? — MSC
They are both good responses though. Not dull to me. There is a third option however, that the person playing with themselves are not just them self but also someone else too. The more you think about identity the more you start to wonder who really won the game. Which part of you won, which part of you lost? If the answer is, a part of you wanted to win and a part of you wanted to lose, you end up with a paradox of belief where we are forced to accept that a person can believe and desire two things at once, even though those two things are in complete opposition to each other.
Lets expand on the problem a bit and not focus on the creative side of it too much, as I did put some detail into the problem that is more so just to be entertaining and it draws your attention away from the content of the problem.
Thank you for engaging with this by the way. I'm trying to test this paradox to see if it is worth putting into the start of my book.
Now, the game ended on the 27th move and white won. Which means between both players, there was a total of 53 moves made.
Let's say the match started on a Monday, and only one of the 53 moves was made each day. Which means the match took 54 days to complete. The game didn't end until black looked at the board to find out they had lost on the 54th day. This means that every second day you tried to win as black and every odd numbered day you played to win as white. — MSC
You've hit upon a very intriguing fact. We're all accustomed to, in philosophy especially, consistency as a necessary feature of the rational mind. If I were to say god exists and then deny it, whether explicitly or in some implicatory sense, people would immediately call me out on it. I daresay most of us subscribe to a worldview with contradictions, obvious and not so obvious. One way of making sense of this would be to say that two different personalities are involved - one of them believes in, say, X and the other doesn't. — TheMadFool
If we say the game was a stalemate, then we are changing the rules of chess. A checkmate is only possible if someone wins and loses, so how could the game be a stalemate? — MSC
At face value, is there something philosophical to be written about it?
I've thought of a lot of reasonable answers to it, but none of them seem to come close to the real issue, by engaging with the problem, you enter into a language game where the same rules apply. You are effectively deciding for yourself if you have answered correctly or not. And the entire game of who wins and loses is a foregone conclusion. Ultimately, your answer says more about you than it does about what the objectively true answer might be. If the answer is that; the person playing themselves decides what the answer is, but I watch you engaging with the same problem then what can I say about your answer? Did you win and lose at the same time? Did you already decide the outcome before the match started?
What if we had changed a rule? If the rule had been that black moves first and the same moves had been made out of a 53 move total, would black have won? If I say that a part of me wanted to win, and a part of me wanted to lose then aren't I saying I held two contradictory beliefs at once? Is it even possible to consider it a game if the winner is also the loser? What if the game takes 53 days and you make a move as black on even numbers and as white on odd numbers?
If we say the game was a stalemate, then we are changing the rules of chess. A checkmate is only possible if someone wins and loses, so how could the game be a stalemate?
Is the game actually between the writer of the problem and the problem solver? Or am I just as unable to provide an answer we can be reasonably certain is true, as you are?
My own answer is just to say "I am reasonably sure that I think there is a paradox here.". Its the closest I can get to an objectively true answer. But I too am under the spell of being in a language game with myself by answering it. I can choose to believe I solved something, even though for the purpose of the game I had to have also pretend I didn't know what the answer was in order to play the game. A part of me had a conclusion that had to be correct and another part that had concluded incorrectly in order to play the game instead of rejecting it as a useless and meaningless exercise.
Rejecting it as a useless and meaningless exercise, is also still an attempt to answer it. So is still a part of the game of playing against ourselves. — MSC
All I'm doing is working with you and your intuition on the subject at hand. It is quite clear that if I utter an obvious contradiction such as "I am here and I am not here" alarm bells go off inside my head but when the contradiction is buried under a mass of ideas as is usually the case, it slips through our inconsistency/contradiction, or if you prefer, bullshit, detector and gets incorporated into what then becomes a self-refuting worldview or belief system. — TheMadFool
That's okay, I am being sincere when I say that the problem has me pretty stumped and I'm definitely working on intuition, among other things, in order to try and tackle it.
If I am understanding your criticism correctly, you are also suggesting that my answer to the problem makes it harder for me to consider and trust any other answer charitably. Would this be a fair assessment? Or does this not really reflect what you were saying?
I definitely feel embarrassed by all my attempts to answer the question. As you'd think the writer of the question would have some say.
If we apply the rules of creating riddles, is my interpretation of the answer, the answer? Or am I only saying that to win a game? — MSC
Agreed. We haven't even gotten to the point of taking about if the only personality playing is the part of me that knows how to play chess and that all the other composite parts of my psyche are just spectating one personality play chess, where the spectators have already voted on who will win while the chess player is confined to playing out the game in response to a vote to either win or lose, based on the colour he is moving, black or white. — MSC
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