billw55, on 2013-June-28, 08:10, said:
This is interesting, and brings me to questions I often have about such a situation. Ethically and/or lawfully, am I supposed to sort of self-rule by passing? Or am I supposed to make what I think is the normal bid on the hand, and let the ruling take its course?
There are two ways to answer this, the legal way and the practical way.
Legally, you're required to apply Laws 16A/B and 73C, so you have to figure out what all the LAs are, which of them demonstrably suggested, avoid choosing them, and also avoid taking advantage of the UI.
Practically, trying to figure that out at in the heat of the moment can drive you crazy. Are you really supposed to figure out what actions other players of your calibre would consider? Sometimes it's hard enough knowing what you're supposed to do in your own system. If the UI
obviously points in a particular direction, I'd avoid going that way if there's a reasonable alternative. But trying to analyze the whole LA calculus is not really feasible.
This also raises the spectre of 72B1: "A player must not infringe a law intentionally, even if there is a prescribed rectification he is willing to accept." Which means you can't just ignore the fact that you received UI because you're willing to let the TD adjust. Especially since there's a good chance the opponents will never call the TD at all.
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For example, if (trying to be ethical) I choose pass, and this actually works out better than balancing, have not the opponents been damaged, in a way? Should the director then adjust?
The choice has to have been "demonstrably suggested" by the UI. If it wasn't, but just happens to turn out well, that's rub of the green.