gordontd, on 2015-February-03, 02:11, said:
The EBU often gets asked about regulations for events of a type that it doesn't run and for which it therefore doesn't have regulations of its own. It could just say "no, we can't help you" or it can provide "suggested methods" that event organisers can use or not as they choose.
The point is that there is nothing "suggested" about the method. It
is the method. Just like there is nothing "suggested" about multiplying by 9/4 when you adjust the cake recipe for 4 people to 9 people: That is simply how you do it. No "hocus pocus", no suggestion that "we can only hope it works, there are no guarantees".
When traffic light turns red: STOP.
When converting Cross-IMPS to VPs: Divide Cross-IMPs by rc and divide by sqrt(2) and use the VP table for team of four IMPs.
When you want to turn right: Turn steering wheel clockwise.
Don't be afraid that you don't understand the intricate mechanism and electronics of the steering column, power steering and its influence on the position of the wheels. That is for the engineers to worry. Just turn the steering wheel. That is neither a suggestion nor a recommendation.
But somehow when a scientist says something, based on hard cold facts, not at all open for discussion, it is interpreted as a suggestion or merely an opinion. I apologize for ranting about this, and to non-scientists it seems like a tempest in a tea cup. But I think it is symptomatic for a wrong attitude towards science and scientific methods in society that worries me. (And part of the blame certainly goes to the scientists.)
Last week I was helping my son with math. He was learning and practicing the "remarkable products", e.g. (a+b)(a-b) = a
2 - b
2. I noticed that he never applied the remarkable products in his exercises, but instead multiplied everything out. I asked him why he did that. The answer: "The religion teacher (!) had told them that scientific and mathematical theories are continuously revised and are, hence, unreliable." So, my son reasoned: the fact that these remarkable products worked yesterday is no guarantee that they will work today or tomorrow.
I know that this has nothing to do with bridge or bridge laws, but as a scientist this attitude drives me nuts.
gordontd, on 2015-February-03, 02:11, said:
Do you also object to the use of 2 IMPs as the standard amount for score adjustments in IMP pairs? Would you prefer that pairs are awarded +/- 2.12 IMPs (still an approximation) for unplayable boards?
I certainly don't object to a "verdict" from a bridge league (or committee) that for IMP pairs the adjustment should be +/- 2. After all, it is an arbitrary number and, essentially, a political decision.
However, if a claim is made that there is a mathematical relation with the 3 IMPs for a team of four match, this changes. Then, they should use the correct relation and I would prefer that they use the number of digits that they report the results in. If the Cross-IMPs are rounded to whole numbers, then use 2. If they are rounded to two digits behind the decimal point thaen use 2.12. If they report 8 digits behind the decimal point use 2.12132034.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg