A little thought experiment

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Reinhardt776
Let’s say a magical/divine figure randomly picked a strong amateur (let’s say around 1600-1900) and placed them in an infinite time loop. Here the player would play the divine figure (skill level as AlphaZero) for infinity until they beat it. The player wouldn’t age or have the need to eat during this loop. Can the phrase “practice makes perfect” work in this case, assuming the player will play for decades, maybe even centuries, straight?
notmtwain
Reinhardt776 wrote:
Let’s say a magical/divine figure randomly picked a strong amateur (let’s say around 1600-1900) and placed them in an infinite time loop. Here the player would play the divine figure (skill level as AlphaZero) for infinity until they beat it. The player wouldn’t age or have the need to eat during this loop. Can the phrase “practice makes perfect” work in this case, assuming the player will play for decades, maybe even centuries, straight?

No, because the 1600-1900 player will never overcome his brain cloud.

Reinhardt776
notmtwain wrote:
Reinhardt776 wrote:
Let’s say a magical/divine figure randomly picked a strong amateur (let’s say around 1600-1900) and placed them in an infinite time loop. Here the player would play the divine figure (skill level as AlphaZero) for infinity until they beat it. The player wouldn’t age or have the need to eat during this loop. Can the phrase “practice makes perfect” work in this case, assuming the player will play for decades, maybe even centuries, straight?

No, because the 1600-1900 player will never overcome his brain cloud.

Can you explain what you mean by this? Do you think a Grandmaster or someone in the world top 10 would fair better?

Shizu_delta

I think, someday his skill will be absolute, but sometimes he will make mistakes (very rarely, but will). And in some games he will be equal magic/divine figure, but it cant do mistake, and this player will only achieve a draw.

2Ke21-0
Reinhardt776 wrote:
Let’s say a magical/divine figure randomly picked a strong amateur (let’s say around 1600-1900) and placed them in an infinite time loop. Here the player would play the divine figure (skill level as AlphaZero) for infinity until they beat it. The player wouldn’t age or have the need to eat during this loop. Can the phrase “practice makes perfect” work in this case, assuming the player will play for decades, maybe even centuries, straight?

No. The player will die of boredom from eternally playing chess. As much as I love chess, nobody can play it forever.