copyright (c) 2008 John L. Jerz

Inside the Chess Mind (Aagaard, 2004)

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How Players of All Levels Think about the Game

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Product Description
Inside the Chess Mind enters fresh territory in chess literature by providing a thought-provoking insight as to how the chess brains of the great, the good, and the improver operate. Renowned chess writer Jacob Aagaard supplies numerous challenges to a group of chess players of a very wide range of ages and playing strengths.


From the Back Cover
What separates a Grandmaster from a club player? How do the thought processes of a world-class competitor differ from that of an amateur? What techniques can an enthusiastic chess player employ when striving to reach the next rung on the ladder? Jacob Aagaard provides the answers to these questions in this revolutionary and entertaining new book. He supplies numerous meticulously selected challenges to a group of players of a very wide range of ages and playing strengths. Once all the participants have attempted the tests, their discoveries, solving methods and difficulties with the exercises are evaluated and compared, and conclusions are drawn while the players are also interviewed about their exercise techniques, ideas and opinions about chess in general. Inside the Chess Mind enters fresh territory in chess literature by providing thought-provoking insight as to how the chess brains of the great, the good and the improver operate.

*Suitable for players of all strengths
*Includes challenging puzzles
*Written by a highly experienced chess coach
*Clarifies both the differences and similarities between Grandmasters and amateurs

p.157"Chess has changed and we understand it better because of the computers. But that does not mean that we can learn anything from the way computers think. Whenever someone tells me chess is only calculation and uses computers as argument I laugh my (censored) off. The day we can calculate 2 million moves per second this argument will be correct. But hardly before then. Still, with a few moves per second the best humans are doing well against the computers. And the reason is that we think differently from them. Obviously tactics are mainly concrete and should not be understood differently. But chess is not only calculation and intuition. It is also logic, understanding of where the pieces belong, and long-term strategy. Here humans still have a great advantage over computers."

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