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Not a sport

#81 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 07:32

 Trinidad, on 2015-October-30, 07:20, said:

So, if the British definition of sport is that it should have positive health effects than -according to that definition- bridge is a sport and American football and boxing are not.

The 1993 definition also starts with the condition of it being a physical activity which is the stumbling block. Many sports have a negative health impact as well as a positive one - American football and boxing come under this category but it would not matter if they had no positive health associations at all, since that part of the definition comes under the OR and they would qualify under the competition sub-clause. Parsing the definition gives:
sport =(physical activity) AND (((imp physical fitness) AND (imp mental well-being)) OR (forms social relationships) OR (obtains results in competition))

A pub crawl is a physical activity that forms social relationships, ergo clearly a sport! In any case, this "physical activity" part is the reason why the question of whether the 1993 or the 2011 definition should be used is so important. But showing health benefits alone is not enough under either definition.
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#82 User is offline   campboy 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 09:12

 Zelandakh, on 2015-October-30, 07:32, said:

The 1993 definition also starts with the condition of it being a physical activity which is the stumbling block. Many sports have a negative health impact as well as a positive one - American football and boxing come under this category but it would not matter if they had no positive health associations at all, since that part of the definition comes under the OR and they would qualify under the competition sub-clause. Parsing the definition gives:
sport =(physical activity) AND (((imp physical fitness) AND (imp mental well-being)) OR (forms social relationships) OR (obtains results in competition))

Also it's not "improves" but "improves or expresses". Anything designed to show off your physical and mental fitness fits the definition, even if the activity itself is damaging.
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#83 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 09:51

 campboy, on 2015-October-30, 09:12, said:

Also it's not "improves" but "improves or expresses". Anything designed to show off your physical and mental fitness fits the definition, even if the activity itself is damaging.

So, participating in a war is a sport?

Rik
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#84 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 10:00

 Trinidad, on 2015-October-30, 09:51, said:

So, participating in a war is a sport?

Rik

Yes. Or getting a health check. Or eating brocolli. But also smoking, since it demonstrates your health that you are able to smoke.

What about comitting suicide? It will give the pathologists a chance to inspect my health state before it deterioates due to old age. Then again, I suppose I can't be said to be healthy once I am dead. So maybe it doesn't count.

Sounds like VAT should only be charged on suicide equipment, unless somebody has the imagination to come up with other counterexamples.
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#85 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 10:04

 Trinidad, on 2015-October-30, 09:51, said:

So, participating in a war is a sport?

Well it is a physical activity so that part is down but I am no so sure of the mental well-being being ticked off and that is necessary with the physical fitness. On other hand you could argue that it forms social relationships. Obtaining results in competition is a tricky one - technically that would be a yes but who is going to interpret them - if I lose 1000 soldiers to capture a battlefield of desert, who is the winner? So it is certainly within the realms of the definition for war to be a sport and pseudo-war activities such as paintball must surely qualify. Indeed now I know the definitions I am mildly surprised that no one has tried to argue that case - not paying VAT on entry fees and ammunition costs must surely be worth millions to the industry!
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#86 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 10:16

I don't think you'll ever be able to come up with a simple, objective definition of "sport". It's similar to Supreme Court Justice Potter's definition of " hard-core pornography" (versus erotica) as "I know it when I see it." (Wow, this is the 2nd time I've referred to this quote in the BBF today.)

When documents like the ones mentioned above try to define "sport", it's clearly meant as a rough guideline, and common sense and tradition are used to refine it. That's why real war is obviously not a sport, but paintball or laser tag (which simulate aspects of war) might be.

#87 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 12:16

 Fluffy, on 2015-October-29, 00:58, said:


Videogame tournaments are giving million dolar prizes, they have a lot of money behind and might make it to olympics just by force one day. you know how olympic comitees work.

The Olympics doesn't care if bridge is a sport or not. Bridge draws few spectators. Videogame tournaments may draw a 20 million TV audience in the USA. Bridge would be lucky to draw a few hundred thousand.
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#88 User is offline   biggerclub 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 20:12

 helene_t, on 2015-October-29, 07:35, said:

The amount of calories burned by competitive bridge compared to formula 1 is probably settled. Whether this is relevant for the original topic of this thread is a different issue.

If the competitive element is enough, I suppose the miss universe contest is a sports event also. But probably most will consider hunting and parcour to be sports even if they are competitive only in a fairly broad sense. So maybe a pet show and a gameshow count also? What about speed dating or job interviews?

Heck, sometimes participating in pointless internet debates feels a bit like a sport.


There is a phrase applied to the activities of young (and some not so young) males in America, at least . . . sport . . . ah let's just say . . . sex. Although the actual verb commonly used here in the colonies is less offensive to Brits than Americans.
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#89 User is offline   biggerclub 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 20:16

 Trinidad, on 2015-October-29, 12:42, said:



For me the qualifications of a sport are roughly:




Is it on ESPN? Thus Poker qualifies, but bridge does not. Nor cricket. At least, I don't think.
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#90 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 23:08

 gwnn, on 2015-October-28, 07:52, said:

Yes you can also gain weight during the marathon if you eat a thousand hot dogs after every mile, but that doesn't make marathon running a non-sport, only this hotdog-marathon combo a non-sport.

If I ate a thousand hot dogs in one sitting, I'd be on my way to the hospital — or the morgue.
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#91 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2015-October-30, 23:45

Yes, I am quite aware of that. It was just a hyperbole (you will note that in another example, I said that killing bears with your hands between boards would make bridge more physically demanding, which is true, but also impossible for anyone other than Vladimir Putin). The point is, any sport done sufficiently slowly, interrupted by sufficiently big snack breaks can lead to a weight gain. I was merely applying Zelandakh's logic (F1 can be a source of calories if you manage to take in 1500 calories in an hour while going at 200mph) to an extreme situation. In practice, bridge players (top ones or average club players) can (realistically) gain weight while playing by just consuming about a can of Coke per session. This does not hold up (in a non-pedantic way) for marathon runners or F1 drivers or many other activities traditionally considered sports.

And just to reiterate, I am not saying that there is a magic number of kcal/h beyond which everything is a sport, and under which nothing is. But kcal/h can give us a good rule of thumb whether a particular activity is physically demanding, and thanks to the health freaks, there are lots of data available about it so it is relatively easy to compare various putative sports. I'm not even really arguing that bridge isn't a sport, since then we are back to square one on what a sport should be. However, despite Trinidad's insistence that including physical strain in the definition is "utter nonsense", all relevant dictionary definitions I could find did indeed do so (even a Dutch one). So if we go by this standard, Formula 1 (and golf, something Trinidad questioned) clearly does meet it and "mind sports" do not.

Edit: sorry added a whole paragraph.
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#92 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2015-October-31, 00:48

I'm sure there are other people dying to know hiw many hot dogs you're allowed to eat during a marathon if you still want to lose weight. It turns out (based on the first google results I found) running a marathon burns 2600 calories (100/mile - a marathon is only about twice as demanding in total as an F1 race) and a hot dog is 290. Rounding up, then, you can eat 10 hot dogs, or one every 2.6 miles or 4.2 km.
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#93 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2015-October-31, 04:56

I think this debate completely misses the most important question: how many calories do you lose while arguing semantics in an online discussion forum?
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke
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#94 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2015-October-31, 05:42

I don't like your spin there. It is closer to 'calories sacrificed to make the world an enlightened and better place.'

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#95 User is offline   biggerclub 

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Posted 2015-October-31, 07:51

 billw55, on 2015-October-15, 12:18, said:

I suppose one could see it that way. But things must be paid for. Is your government running a surplus? If not, which services/spending would you cut in order to reduce the VAT? Or would you raise some other tax to compensate? Perhaps increase borrowing? Just wondering.


I waded through the whole thread just to see if anyone would address this legitimate question. I was disappointed.

IMO -- the most sound tax policy collects all taxes for all levels of government activity on privately owned land/mineral wealth. It was strongly proposed in the US at the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th Century. We even had a "single tax" advocate who ran, strongly for US President, Henry George. George's seminal work on inequality, "Progress and Poverty" was the best-selling US book in history for a while.

The thesis is that if the government charges people for the right to maintain exclusive use of land, land will be forced into the hands of those who can put it to best use -- productive use, not speculative holding based on expectation of appreciation. My own extension of this is to charge a "perpetual tax" on the extraction and use of mineral wealth.
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#96 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2015-October-31, 08:57

 biggerclub, on 2015-October-30, 20:16, said:

Is it on ESPN? Thus Poker qualifies, but bridge does not. Nor cricket. At least, I don't think.

The national spelling bee is on ESPN every year. One year ESPN had one hour on the scrabble championships. Never seen bridge. Cricket occasionally gets mentioned.
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#97 User is offline   campboy 

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Posted 2015-November-02, 03:15

 helene_t, on 2015-October-30, 10:00, said:

Yes. Or getting a health check. Or eating brocolli. But also smoking, since it demonstrates your health that you are able to smoke.

What about comitting suicide? It will give the pathologists a chance to inspect my health state before it deterioates due to old age. Then again, I suppose I can't be said to be healthy once I am dead. So maybe it doesn't count.

Sounds like VAT should only be charged on suicide equipment, unless somebody has the imagination to come up with other counterexamples.

I think some of those don't count since the definition talks about the aims of the activity, not the effects. Smoking may demonstrate your health, but that's not why people do it.
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#98 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2015-November-02, 03:40

As an aside, I remember I needed an inspection from a sports doctor each year before participating in the Romanian Youth Chess Championships (the same exact form was needed for Greco-Roman wrestlers or gymnasts as well, although I suppose the examinations were slightly different). The doctor and my parents always had a bit of a chuckle about this "bureaucratic absurdity" but one time they identified a minor heart irregularity I was suffering from, so it was not all pointless (but I was still allowed to play chess so it was a win/win for me).
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#99 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2015-November-02, 10:54

IMO, on the cusp:
  • Tiddlywinks is a sport because it's key skill is physical (judgement and dexterity)
  • Dominoes is not a sport although it involves moving things about, because the key skill is not physical.

Although how such distinctions affect VAT boggles the mind
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#100 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2015-November-03, 09:46

 nige1, on 2015-November-02, 10:54, said:

IMO, on the cusp:
  • Tiddlywinks is a sport because it's key skill is physical (judgement and dexterity)
  • Dominoes is not a sport although it involves moving things about, because the key skill is not physical.

Although how such distinctions affect VAT boggles the mind

I suspect that if there were a world championship in dominoes, a quadriplegic competitor could have an assistant to position tiles in exactly the manner dictated by the competitor; in this case it would be clear that manual dexterity had zero effect on the outcome of the competition.
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