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by giraffe_lady
431 days ago
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I don't know why you'd expect to be able to read the board as a non-player. If I watch a surgeon at work a lot of the individual motions are inscrutable to me. It's like looking at sheet music if you don't play an instrument. You just don't have the mental schema to see what is interesting about even the most interesting parts. I was watching this game with my go club and we all instantly saw the significance of 37, it was audible in the room. 78 felt tangibly different, some of us immediately read it as a clear misplay, some were taking longer to come to any conclusion, just puzzled. Our most experienced player, at the time 5 dan, gasped when he got it. But it still took him time to even intuit what it was doing. Now that it is well understood, moves of that type are common even in intermediate level play. Changed the game forever. |
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That's an important takeaway from the AlphaGo saga:
It played moves that (at the time, for human players) seemed weird. And while playing those, outperformed humans.
But as understanding of how/why of such moves grew, it showed humans new ways of doing things. And in doing so, become better players themselves.
AlphaGo broke new ground, humans followed. And like you said: changed the game forever.
Also, the subtlety of what makes a win:
Humans, before AlphaGo: try & grab as much territory as possible to beat your opponent.
AlphaGo: just try to grab more territory than opponent (so, not necessarily much more). End up with only 1 point advantage = still a win.
Different viewing angle, different strategy, different outcome.