DrTodd13, on Dec 11 2008, 11:02 PM, said:
I disagree with much of that.
- Who says pre-alerts give people a chance to devise something reasonable on the spot? Most of my bidding ideas have proven to be bad, but there would be no way for me to realize that immediately without first trying them out.
- Who even knows what reasonable is? Is it ok as long as they can come up with something that won't reach a terrible contract on easy hands? What about the next round of the auction, it's very likely to come up but the possibilities to discuss are quite numerous.
- Who says the opponents shouldn't get to pre-prepare for every possible meaning? That looks a lot like you 'appending something onto the laws in practice as a matter of preference'. Which nothing is wrong with doing, but it's just an opinion and I don't agree.
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You freely admit you believe in unrestricted bidding. In the midst of a discussion on the topic, you put forth an analogy that supports the idea of unrestricted bidding, by demonstrating a potential and supposedly analagous situation in another game where the idea of a restriction looks silly.
Do you know what self-serving means?
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I don't see anyone saying it couldn't possibly be done. Who made that claim? Obviously bridge could be played however people want.
That being said, it looks to me like you are attempting to dance on a pinhead. You are trying very hard to convince that although you believe system restrictions should be removed, you are not actually arguing system restrictions should be removed, merely that they could be removed. I'm certainly willing to accept your intentions for whatever you say they are, and it's not like someone would be in the wrong to make either argument anyway, but I think you are kidding yourself and have clearly argued for both. Why would you make an analogy clearly designed to make system restrictions look like a dumb idea unless you were arguing they should be removed?
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1. Would something like this suffice?
jdonn, on Dec 3 2008, 10:50 PM, said:
I seem to recall making similar statements several times throughout the thread.
2. I never argued it's not feasible. I argued that it's MUCH less feasible in bridge than it is in chess, and therefore the chess analogy is inaccurate.
3. The argument that you erroneously credit me with would only be specious if your statement that (paraphrasing) 'the way bridge is run could adapt to a potential desire of the bridge playing public to eliminate system restrictions' were a fact. It seems to me you obviously presented that as an opinion, which it is.