Group A · Match 03
Result 3-1. Outcome: NAT (Albert Einstein).
Turn 1. Bishop answers: "I need not enumerate the actual results which the last century gained by this work."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 2. Bishop answers: "There had been another change, though, that was significant enough and that was in the colors."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 3. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 4. Bishop answers: "Good Lord, what man in Robotics has not been investigated and cleared to death by your people."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 5. Bishop answers: "Naturalists continually refer to external conditions, such as climate, food, etc., as the only possible cause of variation."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 6. Bishop answers: "Elias Lynn was a large man, almost charmingly homely, with pale blue eyes that bulged a bit."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 7. Pass. "It is only with reluctance that man's desire for knowledge endures a dualism of this kind."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 8. Pass. Isaac Asimov releases to Queen Emily Dickinson, who re-centers the question.
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 9. Bishop answers: "From the strong principle of inheritance, any selected variety will tend to propagate its new and modified form."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 10. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 11. Bishop answers: "He had probably never dipped very deep in the latter subject, and that strengthened our doubts."
\nThe score moves to 1-0.
Turn 12. Bishop answers: "Certainly, it is heaven upon earth, to have a man's mind move in charity, rest in providence, and turn upon the poles of truth."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 13. Knight asks: "Natural philosophy, which preceded all exact observation in antiquity, is a natural, but not unfrequently ill-directed, effort of reason?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 14. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 15. Bishop answers: "In the last chapter I shall give a brief recapitulation of the whole work, and a few concluding remarks."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 16. Bishop answers: "Over there, They were "We" (in the appropriate language) and We were "They." Scarcely anyone gave thought to such things any more."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 17. Advance. "How was unity to be preserved in his comprehension of the forces of nature".
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 18. Challenge. Isaac Asimov releases to Queen Emily Dickinson, who tests the opposing line.
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 19. Challenge. "Thus the endeavour toward a unified view of the nature of forces leads to the hypothesis of an ether."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 20. Bishop answers: "There had been another change, though, that was significant enough and that was in the colors."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 21. Pass. Albert Einstein releases to Queen David Bohm, who re-centers the question.
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 22. Bishop answers: "Good Lord, what man in Robotics has not been investigated and cleared to death by your people."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 23. Knight asks: "That which is attained by observation and experiment (calling forth phenomena) leads, by analogy and induction, to a knowledge of 'empirical laws'; their gradual simplification and generalization?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 24. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if Isaac Asimov keeps the focus here?"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 25. Bishop answers: "Any change in the embryo or larva will almost certainly entail changes in the mature animal."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 26. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 27. Knight asks: "The 'existing' can not be absolutely separated in our contemplation of nature from the 'future'?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 28. Bishop answers: "The reason was, because the religion of the heathen, consisted rather in rites and ceremonies, than in any constant belief."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 29. Advance. "It appeared beyond question that light must be interpreted as a vibratory process in an elastic, inert medium filling up universal space."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 30. Bishop answers: "I have enlarged them, both in Number, and Weight; So that they are indeed a New Worke."
\nThe score moves to 1-1.
Turn 31. Challenge. "It is only with reluctance that man's desire for knowledge endures a dualism of this kind."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 32. Pass. Queen Emily Dickinson re-centers the question.
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 33. Save. "How was unity to be preserved in his comprehension of the forces of nature".
\nClosure is delayed at 1-1.
Turn 34. Advance. Checked Queen Emily Dickinson develops the line.
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 35. Bishop answers: "We now know that many of these hypotheses, which found favour in their day, far overshot the mark."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 36. Challenge. Checked Queen Emily Dickinson tests the opposing line.
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 37. Bishop answers: "Owing to the Reformation, intellectual life had lost its old stability and cohesion; everything appeared in a new light, and new questions arose."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 38. Pass. "Or ere that work engag'd me, I did hold Christ's nature merely human, with such faith Contented."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 39. Knight asks: "Misunderstood popular knowledge, confounding cosmography with a mere encyclopedic enumeration of natural sciences?"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 40. Bishop answers: "Tiberius in dissimulation; as Tacitus saith of him, Jam Tiberium vires et corpus, non dissimulatio, deserebant."
\nClosure is delayed at 1-1.
Turn 41. Knight asks: "Natural philosophy, which preceded all exact observation in antiquity, is a natural, but not unfrequently ill-directed, effort of reason?"
\nThe score moves to 2-1.
Turn 42. Challenge. "It answer to his question none return'd, But of our country and our kind of life Demanded."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 43. Bishop answers: "Naturalists continually refer to external conditions, such as climate, food, etc., as the only possible cause of variation."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 44. Save. Queen Emily Dickinson is denied closure.
\nClosure is delayed at 2-1.
Turn 45. Bishop answers: "I need not enumerate the actual results which the last century gained by this work."
\nThe score moves to 3-1.
Turn 46. Advance. Checked Queen Emily Dickinson develops the line.
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 47. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 48. Challenge. Checked Queen Emily Dickinson tests the opposing line.
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Discourse B (0.854); aesthetic B (0.877); repetition 0.198. Move mix: 13 pass, 12 advance, 16 challenge, 4 claim, 3 save.
| Turn | Score | Action | Call | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0-0 | Pass | Bishop Hermann von Helmholtz re-centers the question. | 0.887 |
| 2 | 0-0 | Pass | Bishop Isaac Asimov re-centers the question. | 0.980 |
| 3 | 0-0 | Challenge | Hermann von Helmholtz releases to Knight Wolfgang Pauli, who tests the opposing line. | 0.728 |
| 4 | 0-0 | Advance | Checked Bishop Isaac Asimov develops the line. | 0.902 |
| 5 | 0-0 | Advance | Bishop Charles Darwin develops the line. | 0.858 |
| 6 | 0-0 | Challenge | Checked Bishop Isaac Asimov tests the opposing line. | 0.603 |
| 7 | 0-0 | Pass | Charles Darwin releases to King Albert Einstein, who re-centers the question. | 0.922 |
| 8 | 0-0 | Pass | Isaac Asimov releases to Queen Emily Dickinson, who re-centers the question. | 0.880 |
| 9 | 0-0 | Challenge | Bishop Charles Darwin tests the opposing line. | 0.993 |
| 10 | 0-0 | Advance | Knight James Baldwin develops the line. | 0.859 |
| 11 | 1-0 | Claim | Charles Darwin releases to Bishop Hermann von Helmholtz, who presses a claim. | 0.852 |
| 12 | 1-0 | Pass | Bishop Francis Bacon re-centers the question. | 0.945 |
| 13 | 1-0 | Pass | Knight Alexander von Humboldt re-centers the question. | 0.840 |
| 14 | 1-0 | Advance | Knight James Baldwin develops the line. | 0.814 |
| 15 | 1-0 | Challenge | Bishop Charles Darwin tests the opposing line. | 0.914 |
| 16 | 1-0 | Challenge | James Baldwin releases to Bishop Isaac Asimov, who tests the opposing line. | 0.915 |
| 17 | 1-0 | Advance | Charles Darwin releases to King Albert Einstein, who develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 18 | 1-0 | Challenge | Isaac Asimov releases to Queen Emily Dickinson, who tests the opposing line. | 0.946 |
| 19 | 1-0 | Challenge | Checked King Albert Einstein tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 20 | 1-0 | Challenge | Emily Dickinson releases to Bishop Isaac Asimov, who tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 21 | 1-0 | Pass | Albert Einstein releases to Queen David Bohm, who re-centers the question. | 0.869 |
| 22 | 1-0 | Advance | Checked Bishop Isaac Asimov develops the line. | 0.962 |
| 23 | 1-0 | Advance | Knight Alexander von Humboldt develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 24 | 1-0 | Advance | Isaac Asimov releases to Knight James Baldwin, who develops the line. | 0.984 |
| 25 | 1-0 | Challenge | Bishop Charles Darwin tests the opposing line. | 0.971 |
| 26 | 1-0 | Challenge | Checked Knight James Baldwin tests the opposing line. | 0.916 |
| 27 | 1-0 | Challenge | Knight Alexander von Humboldt tests the opposing line. | 0.755 |
| 28 | 1-0 | Pass | James Baldwin releases to Bishop Francis Bacon, who re-centers the question. | 0.946 |
| 29 | 1-0 | Advance | Alexander von Humboldt releases to King Albert Einstein, who develops the line. | 0.970 |
| 30 | 1-1 | Claim | Checked Bishop Francis Bacon presses a claim. | 1.000 |
| 31 | 1-1 | Challenge | Checked King Albert Einstein tests the opposing line. | 0.974 |
| 32 | 1-1 | Pass | Queen Emily Dickinson re-centers the question. | 0.890 |
| 33 | 1-1 | Save | Checked King Albert Einstein is denied closure. | 0.877 |
| 34 | 1-1 | Advance | Checked Queen Emily Dickinson develops the line. | 0.696 |
| 35 | 1-1 | Pass | Bishop Hermann von Helmholtz re-centers the question. | 0.930 |
| 36 | 1-1 | Challenge | Checked Queen Emily Dickinson tests the opposing line. | 0.959 |
| 37 | 1-1 | Advance | Checked Bishop Hermann von Helmholtz develops the line. | 0.990 |
| 38 | 1-1 | Pass | Emily Dickinson releases to King Dante Alighieri, who re-centers the question. | 0.988 |
| 39 | 1-1 | Pass | Hermann von Helmholtz releases to Knight Alexander von Humboldt, who re-centers the question. | 0.995 |
| 40 | 1-1 | Save | Dante Alighieri releases to Bishop Francis Bacon, who is denied closure. | 1.000 |
| 41 | 2-1 | Claim | Checked Knight Alexander von Humboldt presses a claim. | 1.000 |
| 42 | 2-1 | Challenge | King Dante Alighieri tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 43 | 2-1 | Pass | Bishop Charles Darwin re-centers the question. | 1.000 |
| 44 | 2-1 | Save | Queen Emily Dickinson is denied closure. | 0.875 |
| 45 | 3-1 | Claim | Charles Darwin releases to Bishop Hermann von Helmholtz, who presses a claim. | 0.964 |
| 46 | 3-1 | Advance | Checked Queen Emily Dickinson develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 47 | 3-1 | Challenge | Knight Wolfgang Pauli tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 48 | 3-1 | Challenge | Checked Queen Emily Dickinson tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |