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chessclockz: 26. MasterClass - Garry Kasporov Teaches Chess - Computers And Chess

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Transcript
00:00the wrong path thinking about solving the game while we're talking about machines being superior
00:07to the best human players. And I can tell you with absolute confidence that in a game between two
00:17humans, two best human players at the world championship match, there is nothing like
00:26perfect chess, perfect game. Some games are really good, but you can always find a tiny, tiny inaccuracy.
00:35I'm not talking about blunders or bad mistakes, inaccuracies. A very good game played by a top
00:44player, say the world champion, say it's 50 moves. It could be 45 good solid moves, four great moves,
00:53but most likely it will be one tiny inaccuracy, which makes no difference when you face another
01:01human. The problem is when you face the machine, there is no typical psychology. I'm in a bad
01:08position. I'm losing my confidence. I'm really thinking about a new game. I'm under this pressure.
01:16I'm thinking about what's happened 10 moves before, when I made a mistake, how on earth I got in such
01:22trouble. The machine doesn't care about it. It doesn't care about anything but current evaluation
01:28of the position. And the moment you make one tiny inaccuracy, it will grab its opportunity.
01:35You may not lose the game, but you will not be able to win the game in a winning position because
01:43the precision that is required to win against the machine, it's unseen in human chess.
01:55We lose our vigilance subconsciously when we are reaching winning position.
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