Group B · Match 11
Result 2-2. Outcome: Draw.
Turn 1. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 2. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\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 move answers pressure.
Turn 4. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 5. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 6. Bishop answers: "But though I be Their frenzy of glee, I am also the passionless soul of the sea!"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 7. Bishop answers: "The Solution of a problem is the method of construction which accomplishes the required end."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 8. Bishop answers: "The Blood of the Osiris" was his word: (Meaning the Christ?) "The life, the tears, the tomb!"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 9. Advance. "And, in the present work, the difficulties of the "5 Liars" Problem, at p."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 10. Pass. "Where then did they know this happy life, save where they know the truth also".
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 11. Challenge. "Soriteses", will, I fear, be condemned as "bad English", unless I say a word in its defence."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 12. Advance. "I am not surprised; for the soul has reason enough, and more than enough, for its joy."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 13. Pass. "For to be possessed of a vigorous mind is not enough; the prime requisite is rightly to apply it."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 14. Advance. "Human friendship also is endeared with a sweet tie, by reason of the unity formed of many souls."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 15. Advance. "I esteemed eloquence highly, and was in raptures with poesy; but I thought that both were gifts of nature rather than fruits of study."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 16. Bishop answers: "I am the priest, the sacrifice, the shrine, I am the love and life of the divine!"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 17. Challenge. "For to hold converse with those of other ages and to travel, are almost the same thing."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 18. Bishop answers: "Learn this, as we pass through the portico: Fear nothing; there is nothing you can know!"
\nThe score moves to 0-1.
Turn 19. 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 20. Pass. "The life of this soul is a life of trouble: the cross is always there, but the progress it makes is great."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 21. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 22. Advance. "Blessed, then, is that soul which our Lord draws on to the understanding of the truth!"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 23. Bishop answers: "In compiling his work the Editor has received invaluable assistance from the late Rev."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 24. Pass. "See where the impotent soul lies along, that is not yet stayed up by the solidity of truth!"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 25. 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 26. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 27. Knight asks: "If this line is valid, what would it imply for the other side to justify now?"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 28. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 29. Bishop answers: "An acute angle is one which is less than a right angle, as A . x v i ."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 30. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe score moves to 0-2.
Turn 31. Bishop answers: "A circle may be described from any centre, and with any distance from that centre as radius."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 32. Bishop answers: "I can defend it on this basis, and that is why this answer matters."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 33. Bishop answers: "Et quand on envisage la question de ce biais, les difficultés disparaissent du même coup."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 34. Bishop answers: "I can defend it on this basis, and that is why this answer matters."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 35. Bishop answers: "La multiplicité sans borne, c'est aussi ce que suppose la nature même de la monade."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 36. Bishop answers: "I can defend it on this basis, and that is why this answer matters."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 37. Pass. "And then, you know, one is so _patient_ with one's self: one _never_ gets irritated at one's own stupidity!"
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 38. Knight asks: "What assumption are we testing if knight keeps the focus here?"
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 39. Advance. "And, all the while, you have been leaving unexplored a perfect _mine_ of wealth."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 40. Bishop answers: "But though I be Their frenzy of glee, I am also the passionless soul of the sea!"
\nClosure is delayed at 0-2.
Turn 41. Bishop answers: "The Solution of a problem is the method of construction which accomplishes the required end."
\nThe move answers pressure.
Turn 42. Challenge. "It is not without reason that I have dwelt so long on this portion of my life."
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 43. Bishop answers: "In compiling his work the Editor has received invaluable assistance from the late Rev."
\nThe score moves to 1-2.
Turn 44. Save. "And not being able to see these in the mind, I thought I could not see my mind."
\nClosure is delayed at 1-2.
Turn 45. Pass. "I was thus led to infer that the ground of our opinions is far more custom and example than any certain knowledge."
\nThe inquiry keeps moving.
Turn 46. Challenge. "Where then did they know this happy life, save where they know the truth also".
\nThe challenge gives the next answer real work to do.
Turn 47. Claim. "For to be possessed of a vigorous mind is not enough; the prime requisite is rightly to apply it."
\nThe score moves to 2-2.
Turn 48. Save. "I am not surprised; for the soul has reason enough, and more than enough, for its joy."
\nClosure is delayed at 2-2.
Discourse A (0.907); aesthetic A (0.925); repetition 0.142. Move mix: 13 pass, 18 advance, 10 challenge, 4 claim, 3 save.
| Turn | Score | Action | Call | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0-0 | Advance | Knight Blaise Pascal develops the line. | 0.936 |
| 2 | 0-0 | Pass | Knight Plato re-centers the question. | 0.751 |
| 3 | 0-0 | Advance | Blaise Pascal releases to Knight Claude Shannon, who develops the line. | 0.792 |
| 4 | 0-0 | Advance | Checked Knight Plato develops the line. | 0.728 |
| 5 | 0-0 | Advance | Knight Blaise Pascal develops the line. | 0.898 |
| 6 | 0-0 | Pass | Bishop Aleister Crowley re-centers the question. | 0.808 |
| 7 | 0-0 | Pass | Bishop Euclid re-centers the question. | 0.718 |
| 8 | 0-0 | Advance | Checked Bishop Aleister Crowley develops the line. | 0.911 |
| 9 | 0-0 | Advance | Euclid releases to King Lewis Carroll, who develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 10 | 0-0 | Pass | Aleister Crowley releases to King Augustine of Hippo, who re-centers the question. | 0.877 |
| 11 | 0-0 | Challenge | Checked King Lewis Carroll tests the opposing line. | 0.995 |
| 12 | 0-0 | Advance | Queen Teresa of Avila develops the line. | 0.928 |
| 13 | 0-0 | Pass | Queen René Descartes re-centers the question. | 0.942 |
| 14 | 0-0 | Advance | King Augustine of Hippo develops the line. | 0.909 |
| 15 | 0-0 | Advance | Checked Queen René Descartes develops the line. | 0.996 |
| 16 | 0-0 | Challenge | Augustine of Hippo releases to Bishop Aleister Crowley, who tests the opposing line. | 0.929 |
| 17 | 0-0 | Challenge | Checked Queen René Descartes tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 18 | 0-1 | Claim | Checked Bishop Aleister Crowley presses a claim. | 1.000 |
| 19 | 0-1 | Challenge | René Descartes releases to Knight Claude Shannon, who tests the opposing line. | 0.936 |
| 20 | 0-1 | Pass | Queen Teresa of Avila re-centers the question. | 0.804 |
| 21 | 0-1 | Advance | Knight Blaise Pascal develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 22 | 0-1 | Advance | Checked Queen Teresa of Avila develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 23 | 0-1 | Challenge | Blaise Pascal releases to Bishop Euclid, who tests the opposing line. | 1.000 |
| 24 | 0-1 | Pass | King Augustine of Hippo re-centers the question. | 1.000 |
| 25 | 0-1 | Challenge | Euclid releases to Knight Blaise Pascal, who tests the opposing line. | 0.946 |
| 26 | 0-1 | Advance | Knight Plato develops the line. | 0.975 |
| 27 | 0-1 | Advance | Checked Knight Blaise Pascal develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 28 | 0-1 | Challenge | Checked Knight Plato tests the opposing line. | 0.768 |
| 29 | 0-1 | Pass | Blaise Pascal releases to Bishop Euclid, who re-centers the question. | 1.000 |
| 30 | 0-2 | Claim | Checked Knight Plato presses a claim. | 0.953 |
| 31 | 0-2 | Advance | Checked Bishop Euclid develops the line. | 0.962 |
| 32 | 0-2 | Pass | Bishop Omar Khayyam re-centers the question. | 1.000 |
| 33 | 0-2 | Pass | Euclid releases to Bishop Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who re-centers the question. | 0.799 |
| 34 | 0-2 | Advance | Checked Bishop Omar Khayyam develops the line. | 0.948 |
| 35 | 0-2 | Advance | Checked Bishop Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz develops the line. | 1.000 |
| 36 | 0-2 | Advance | Checked Bishop Omar Khayyam develops the line. | 0.962 |
| 37 | 0-2 | Pass | Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz releases to King Lewis Carroll, who re-centers the question. | 0.825 |
| 38 | 0-2 | Challenge | Knight Plato tests the opposing line. | 0.867 |
| 39 | 0-2 | Advance | Checked King Lewis Carroll develops the line. | 0.999 |
| 40 | 0-2 | Save | Plato releases to Bishop Aleister Crowley, who is denied closure. | 1.000 |
| 41 | 0-2 | Pass | Lewis Carroll releases to Bishop Euclid, who re-centers the question. | 0.878 |
| 42 | 0-2 | Challenge | Aleister Crowley releases to Queen Teresa of Avila, who tests the opposing line. | 0.967 |
| 43 | 1-2 | Claim | Checked Bishop Euclid presses a claim. | 0.995 |
| 44 | 1-2 | Save | Teresa of Avila releases to King Augustine of Hippo, who is denied closure. | 0.866 |
| 45 | 1-2 | Pass | Queen René Descartes re-centers the question. | 0.998 |
| 46 | 1-2 | Challenge | Checked King Augustine of Hippo tests the opposing line. | 0.883 |
| 47 | 2-2 | Claim | Checked Queen René Descartes presses a claim. | 0.911 |
| 48 | 2-2 | Save | Augustine of Hippo releases to Queen Teresa of Avila, who is denied closure. | 1.000 |