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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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There wouldn't be much point in adding a new sport to the Olympics if it was exactly like others that are already there. New sports should have to argue for their significant difference from the others rather than their similarity, shouldn't they?
This is very nicely put. However I still maintain that chess should not make any effort to be categorized as a sport which I consider degrading. Chess is in a class by itself, above all others, of course. That is what should be recognized.
One way of looking at it is:
If it is played on a board then its a game.
If not played on a board then maybe its a sport.
Chess is intellectual but so is scrabble so why is not scrabble considered a sport?
I think because you play most games on boards that makes the difference more
concrete that most people consider chess a game.
A possible criteria for allowing Scrabble (with English letters only?) could be that there is a large number of (English literate) people in the world who play it, and play it well. Allowing Chinese chess as a choice may well be restricting the field of cometitors in that game to fewer skilled players in the world. Plus, the symbols on the pieces are in Chinese, if I recall correctly (certainly for Shogi, which is not included, Japanese symbols are on the pieces). However, knowing how the pieces move is rather more important than reading the symbols for what they are.
In any case, the competition could be set up so that players could compete in some number (but not necessarily all) of the various games allowed, similar to in the Olympics, so that competitors may opt out of, say, Scrabble if they wished.
If Bridge is allowed as an option, why not Poker?
Btw, I think it may be disputable that chess is the best board game, although it could be called in a class by itself (as all the other games are). I remember Jean once implying on chesstalk I should not possibly imply other games are necessarily worse than chess. ;) [edit: I've since found the post by Jean I recalled, though it's not quite as clear-cut about the possibility of chess' superiority as I remembered:
- all at the same time, and completely meeting the definition of each! ( How's that for being provocative - putting Kasparov-Karpov in the same group as Picasso ! and Mozart! )
Bottom line, if we're talking about government funding: The reason they currently promote sport is to combat obesity and health problems by increasing physical fitness. Does chess in any way serve that goal?
Bottom line, if we're talking about government funding: The reason they currently promote sport is to combat obesity and health problems by increasing physical fitness. Does chess in any way serve that goal?
Absolutely. In a typical weekender, there is as little time as possible left for eating. :)
Bottom line, if we're talking about government funding: The reason they currently promote sport is to combat obesity and health problems by increasing physical fitness. Does chess in any way serve that goal?
It's not about the word 'sport'. It's about health. Arguing that chess is should fit the definition of 'sport' misses the point. Argue instead that chess meets some objectives the government is after, and use that merit to fit into a program.
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