jp wrote: ↑Sat Sep 05, 2020 3:17 am
towforce wrote: ↑Fri Sep 04, 2020 2:42 pm
There are chess positions in which there are a large number of moves to the checkmate, but for which a rule can be written to determine whether the position is winning or not. That disproves the (assumed, not stated in the report) idea that there is a linear relationship between the number of moves to checkmate and the amount of processing needed to determine that the position is winning.
No, that is incorrect. You are misunderstanding the paper.
There is nothing in the paper related to or assuming some "linear relationship".
I know: I said that in the quoted text above.
The paper uses a standard TCS proof technique. If you are not familiar with this technique, it might be confusing to you.
I cannot see that in the paper. Unless I missed it, it makes no reference to a proof technique. If I did miss it, please quote the text that I missed in the paper.
Once again, here's what I can see that the paper ACTUALLY does:
1. it describes a binary game
2. it shows that, in winnable positions, the distance (number of moves) to the win can increase exponentially with the size of the game
3. it shows mathematical transformations between the binary game and the game of chess
So the "proving" in the paper is proving that as the chess board size increases, it's possible for the distance to checkmate to increase exponentially.
If the paper does more than that, it would be helpful if you would point to at least one sentence in the paper that does that, please.
As I've said before, both the authors and the peer reviewer were clumsy (e.g. the horribly incorrect use of the word "infinitely" on the first page). I once had a job in which I read thousands of reports. By the end, I was able to pick up a paper and judge its quality in, literally, seconds. This paper has two contra-indicators:
1. obvious clumsy mistakes, which scream "careless" to a trained listener
2. obfuscation, which often indicate that something (or multiple things) are being hidden
I am, however, willing to admit that I might be wrong - but it would be really helpful if someone, ANYONE!, could show me one single sentence in the paper that goes further that goes further than demonstrating that the number of moves to checkmate increases with the size of the game.