Aron Nimzowitsch: First restrain, next blockade, lastly destroy.
Steinitz's Four Rules of Strategy
Wilhelm Steinitz, the first undisputed world chess champion from 1886 to 1894, was a main chess correspondent to present his ideas about chess strategy [5]:
The right to attack belongs to the side that has a positional advantage, which not only has the right to attack, but the obligation to do so, else the advantage will evaporate. The attack should be concentrated on the weakest square in the opponent's position.
If in an inferior position, the defender should be ready to defend and make compromises, or take other measures, such as a desperate counterattack.
In an equal position, the opponents should maneuver, trying to achieve a position in which they have an advantage. If both sides play correctly, an equal position will remain equal.
The advantage may be a big, indivisible one, or it may be a whole series of small advantages. The goal of the stronger side is to store up the advantages, and then to convert temporary advantages into permanent ones.
David Wilkins (1979). Using Patterns and Plans to Solve Problems and Control Search. Ph.D. thesis, Computer Science Dept, Stanford University, Stanford, California, AI Lab Memo AIM-329
David Wilkins (1979). Using plans in chess. In Proceedings of the 1979 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, (Tokyo, Japan), pp. 960-967.
Jonathan Schaeffer (1983). Long-Range Planning in Computer Chess. Proceedings of the Annual ACM Conference (Computers: Extending the Human Resources), pp. 170-179.
Hans Berliner (1985). Goals, Plans, and Mechanisms: Non-symbolically in an Evaluation Surface. Presentation at Evolution, Games, and Learning, Center for Nonlinear Studies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, May 21.
Richard Korf (1987). Planning as Search: A Quantitative Approach. Artificial Intelligence, Vol. 33, pp. 65-88.
David Wilkins (1988). Practical Planning: Extending the Classical AI Planning Paradigm. (Morgan Kaufmann Series in Representation and Reasoning), amazon.com
Steven Walczak and Douglas D. Dankel II (1993). Acquiring Tactical and Strategic Knowledge with a Generalized Method for Chunking of Game Pieces. International Journal of Intelligent Systems, Vol. 8, No. 2
The concepts of strategy and tactics in chess and other sports are derived from military origins as defined as a fourfold hierarchy of strategy, operational objective, tactic and task.
Table of Contents
Quotes
[2][3]Steinitz's Four Rules of Strategy
Wilhelm Steinitz, the first undisputed world chess champion from 1886 to 1894, was a main chess correspondent to present his ideas about chess strategy [5]:Search Strategy
Search strategy refers to search techniques and algorithms:See also
Publications
1970 ...
1980 ...
1990 ...
2000 ...
2010 ...
Forum Posts
External Links
References
What links here?
Up one Level