I would second this. computers in chess do not teach anything. Computer can
show you the great move but cannot explain it.

Probably as hard problem to crack as was making a good computer go

2016-03-14 16:22 GMT+02:00 Robert Jasiek <jas...@snafu.de>:

> On 14.03.2016 08:59, Jim O'Flaherty wrote:
>
>> an AI player who becomes a better and better teacher.
>>
>
> But you are aware that becoming a stronger AI player does not equal
> becoming a stronger teacher? Teachers also need to (translate to and)
> convey human knowledge and reasoning, and adapt to the specific pupils'
> needs (incl. reasoning, subconscious thinking and psychology) while
> interacting with human language specialised in go language. Solve two dozen
> AI tasks, combine them and then, maybe, you get the equivalent of a
> teacher. [FYI, I have taught 100+ regular single go pupils since 2008, and
> groups of pupils.]
>
> --
> robert jasiek
>
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