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Record Set For World's Youngest Chess Champion

Pickens writes "Hou Yifan, a 16-year-old chess player from China, became the youngest world chess champion on Friday, in the final of the Women's World Chess Championship held in Antakya, Turkey, toppling a record held since 1978. Currently, the top-ranked woman is Judit Polgar of Hungary, who is thought to be the best female player in history but Polgar, once ranked No. 8 in the world among all players, men and women combined, does not compete in women's tournaments and did not play. No one really knows why the best female players are typically not as good at chess as the best men. One theory, common among some top male players, is that men are usually more aggressive by nature than women, and are therefore better suited to a game that simulates warfare. Another, cited in at least one university study, is that the talent pool among women has not been big enough to produce many great players."

214 comments

  1. Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Bob_Who · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...In which case she'd actually be 12.

    1. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by wan9xu · · Score: 2

      either way she would not have much of a childhood. most such prodigies in china end up having a very miserable time before they achieve fame, and even worse when they fall from it.

    2. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent is ranked "Funny" ???

      Racism is funny ????

    3. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The word you're looking for is 'sexism'.

    4. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most cultures like to call it 'honoring their culture'.

    5. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by jamesh · · Score: 1

      Interesting that without mentioning anything about a culture (China presumably), you immediately picked up the intent and labeled it racist. That's why it's funny.

    6. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by ruebarb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a great accomplishment, whether thru Government assistance or otherwise, she still had to play the game on the board herself.

      There was a little to be desired in terms of format - whereas the FIDE championship has a series of candidate matches to decide who goes against the challenger, (qualifications of which keep changing) - the Women's championship is a shootout format where last year's champion busted out in round two, more like a poker tournament then the way FIDE handles the regular Championship.

      Truth is, there is a lot wrong with FIDE right now and competitive chess, but Hou Yifan's accomplishment is probably the most important accomplishment in the chess world in 2010

      --

      ----------
      ah honey, we're all resplendent - Bill Mallonee
    7. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by atari2600 · · Score: 1

      Well said. http://goo.gl/fuylm This will probably be marked troll but any news with the word China = I grab my salt shaker and remind myself about a cliche.

    8. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    9. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by BeanThere · · Score: 2

      That's repeated often but let's think rationally about that for a moment.

      Firstly, these young children that are so good at something particular, it's pretty much not possible that you can become so good at something unless you already enjoy it, and are highly driven. You think the government picks children purely at random and then holds a gun to their head for years until they become good? Even if they did, this wouldn't produce optimal results. No, the government picks children that are already showing themselves from a young age to be amongst the top achievers in things like gymnastics, and then primes those.

      Secondly, something tells me that achieving great accomplishments at international events like the Olympics, is probably something these kids rather like. I certainly would. What, you think they go "oh I SO hate that I won a medal at the olympics, instead of being a nobody"? I don't think so.

    10. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are there any BLACK chess masters, I wonder?

      Gee...

    11. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are there any BLACK chess masters, I wonder?

      Gee...

      Chess is a game for intellectuals - so the players have names, genders ('cause women aren't encouraged to play in all cultures), and countries. Skin colour doesn't have any bearing.

      The answer to your question is yes, of course. Chess sets, like basketballs, and access to places to run are cheap. Sorry - no lists that I know of - try looking through pics of various comps.

    12. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by wan9xu · · Score: 1

      i can do that because i am chinese. not an ABC, but a PRC native. i know my race. i know how the society works.

    13. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      I should hope it's neither insitefull nor informative.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    14. Re:Good thing she's not an olympic gymnist.... by Fizzol · · Score: 1

      Yes there are. The youngest master in the US currently, is Black. Maurice Ashley has had a long career. Black chess masters aren't all that common, but they aren't exactly rare either.

  2. Talent pool by Amorymeltzer · · Score: 5, Informative

    The same argument is sometimes applied to certain fields like math, etc., where men seem to be more successful than women. On average, men and women perform at the same level; the difference comes in the distribution. Men supposedly tend to cluster at the really high and really low levels, so while 4/5 of the best may be male, 4/5 of the very worst will also be male. It's a thought-provoking theory, and there is actually some evidence for it, but there is also plenty of evidence against it and it isn't one to make lightly. Like many other areas, it is likely really smart women are tragically funneled elsewhere or pushed to do something "more appropriate."

    More concretely, the concept that chess simulates war is simply outdated. Civilization, Warcraft III, and half the console games these days simulate war. Chess is an artful mastery of planning, brainpower, and pattern recognition that cannot be matched, but it's NOT warfare, not the way it matters.

    --
    I live in constant fear of the Coming of the Red Spiders.
    1. Re:Talent pool by shaitand · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The underlying concepts of the games you listed, including chess, are pretty much the same. What is your basis for saying chess is not a war simulation? Lack of explosions?

    2. Re:Talent pool by Kagura · · Score: 2

      Chess is a war simulation as much as baseball is.

    3. Re:Talent pool by Mitchell314 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The answer may be simpler. Let's say you have population A that has a normal distribution of skill and many members, and you have population B with the same normal distribution of skill but few members, members of A *will* dominate the top places in rank, even though any person from A has has no advantage over a player in B. If you pick any range of skill, A will dominate with the number of players, including the back end (which you don't hear about). So near the very top, B will drop off before A.

      In my experience, I saw the same effect with cross country. Some schools have huge (like 60 runners) running teams, some have just enough (7) runners to qualify. And what I saw was that large schools tended to take the top spots and small schools usually got slaughtered even though the average runners performed about the same regardless of school. For those not familiar with how high school cross country is "scored," only the top (~5) runners from each team are compared plus a few tie breakers, which means only the top arrangement counts, so the bulk of the other runners don't matter. ie slow runners don't penalize a team. Hence the much larger teams having an advantage, even they also have the most slow runners too. Although this was only the case when one team was much larger or smaller.

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    4. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The chess is pure strategy and logic. Any warfare is based on strategy. Are you still think you are right ?
      About woman...
      Woman has no nuts. This basic thing you should learn at lest from movies.
      In case of danger - man will attack, woman will do whatever else to survive. That expands to the males with woman brain also. Of course, any rule has exceptions. But this is thinking by overall categories and marks.

    5. Re:Talent pool by shaitand · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Baseball is an athletic competition, the only thing it has in common with combat is running.

      Chess is a tactical competition where two opposing sides must utilize resources with different strengths and weakness, protect multiple fronts, and make strategic sacrifices, including faints and deceptions to attempt to annihilate one another. Just like actual warfare.

      Unlike baseball chess was designed for the express purpose of being a high level warfare simulation.

      If you'd said football you could have at least made an argument. You'd be wrong, but at least there'd be an argument there.

    6. Re:Talent pool by shaitand · · Score: 2

      To expand on my other comment. What do you think matters (with regard to differences in males and females) in warfare that is missing in chess?

      From a recent CNN article ( http://articles.cnn.com/2010-03-23/opinion/brizendine.male.brain_1_male-brain-mate-early-feminists?_s=PM:OPINION ):

      "The "defend your turf" area -- dorsal premammillary nucleus -- is larger in the male brain and contains special circuits to detect territorial challenges by other males. And his amygdala, the alarm system for threats, fear and danger is also larger in men. These brain differences make men more alert than women to potential turf threats."

      Chess includes attack, defense, and territory. Your opponents pieces threaten your own pieces. As a male you sense this threat, fear the danger it represents to your fronts, and the massive flood of testerone in your system flood the aggresive retaliation and attack in turn.

      None of that means much to a computer which is simply calculating every possible move but it certainly matters when playing a human. The hands are more complex in Chess than poker but you are still playing against your opponent, not merely his position.

    7. Re:Talent pool by davek · · Score: 2

      Chess is an artful mastery of planning, brainpower, and pattern recognition that cannot be matched, but it's NOT warfare, not the way it matters.

      O, but it is...

      The more you play chess, the more you realize that life in general is chess, and that life does includes warfare. The (grossly understated) realization is this: you must judge your next move in terms of how you're opponent will react to it. A move that makes your position look better means nothing if it is countered with a simple pawn push. Or, more simply said, DON'T MAKE STUPID MOVES. Whereupon, the majority of the game becomes finding the stupid moves and not making them.

      This is the (again, grossly simplified) theory of warfare. Don't make stupid, easily countered moves. Don't stand your troops in a line of red coats in a field and expect the other side to "play fair." Don't think your king is strong enough to be attacked on two fronts. Don't attack Russia in the winter. Never go against a Sicilian when death is on the line... and so on.

      --
      6th Street Radio @ddombrowsky
    8. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Baseball & other sports take more mental prowess than you seem to think, at least on the professional level. A lot of a teams success can hang on managements ability to judge the other team, their own personnel & how they use their personnel.

    9. Re:Talent pool by BlackBloq · · Score: 1

      Christ it's silly to think that the games we play are not war training. Baseball is and yes, when the kitten chases the leaf it's practicing killing. Proof of that, make a fluffy ball act like hurt prey, running from the cat, hiding, it goes wild! Make the same fluff stalk the cat (like a dog would like more back and forth-ish) then the cat will be like "fuck you man I ain't playin this!". The truth is, the less we consider something a sport the less like war it is. See football for squad combat See golf for "That's a sport right... oh yea you HIT something so yea". See polo for literal sword/horse training. Chess is war that's pretty simple to see.

    10. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the reason is the sacrifice required. One has to spend absurd amounts of time thinking about chess to get to that level, and other aspects of a person's life will end up neglected. Women seem less willing to make the choice to abandon their other interests to focus their thinking on a mere game.

      Just my opinion, I've only got anecdotal evidence.

    11. Re:Talent pool by pmontra · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up! If 80% of the chess players were women we'll have a female world champion and we'd be wondering why men can't play that well.

    12. Re:Talent pool by Solandri · · Score: 1

      The same argument is sometimes applied to certain fields like math, etc., where men seem to be more successful than women. On average, men and women perform at the same level; the difference comes in the distribution. Men supposedly tend to cluster at the really high and really low levels, so while 4/5 of the best may be male, 4/5 of the very worst will also be male. It's a thought-provoking theory, and there is actually some evidence for it, but there is also plenty of evidence against it and it isn't one to make lightly. Like many other areas, it is likely really smart women are tragically funneled elsewhere or pushed to do something "more appropriate."

      So why then do women perform better than men on standardized verbal tests? When men perform better (like at math), everyone seems to try to come up with reasons why they're not really better, or how society is holding women back. But when women perform better, people just seem to accept that they're better than men at that activity.

      This becomes more relevant when you consider that the male/female ratio of undergraduate students now favors women by a larger amount than their ratio in the population. If anything, it's the men who are falling behind and need help.

    13. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women are also capable of handling multiple tasks better, while men have a greater ability to focus. I don't see the undergrad stat as very meaningful. Stereotypically those women are going into healthcare or teaching. Men tend to go into trades like carpentry, plumbing, auto mechanic, etc. which do not require a 4 year degree. It's important to look at what those undergrads are majoring in. Men are still trouncing women in math and hard sciences.

    14. Re:Talent pool by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      The answer may be simpler. Let's say you have population A that has a normal distribution of skill and many members, and you have population B with the same normal distribution of skill but few members

      So you're saying there are far fewer women than men? Last I checked, the ratio was close to 50:50 (according to Wikipedia, the global average is 105:100 males:females: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_sex_ratio)

      The question is why fewer women would choose to play chess then; you haven't really answered the question, just shifted it slightly.

      Personally I think women are just less interested in chess, which is probably genetic.

    15. Re:Talent pool by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Chess is medieval Starcraft.

      How many of the world's top competitive Starcraft players are chicks?

    16. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple explanation for this - men have very slightly higher mathematical ability on average, but much larger variance - so much greater numbers at top end of bell curve:

      http://www.lagriffedulion.f2s.com/math.htm

    17. Re:Talent pool by kanto · · Score: 1

      Personally I think women are just less interested in chess, which is probably genetic.

      I think it's mostly a cultural thing, chess and other intellectual pursuits just aren't considered to be compatible with being feminine. Also women competing directly with men is still somewhat a taboo which is partly why we have womens' league for just about everything irregardless of whether it's required or not; as a result of playing in a less competitive group you get worse results.

    18. Re:Talent pool by obarel · · Score: 1

      What bothers me is that it seems that women are less interested in everything.
      This fact alone can explain many things, but I'm wondering whether it's true, and if it is, why.

      It is possible that it's not that chess itself is a war game, but that any competitive sport (or any competition in general, including academia and politics) is a war, and women tend to avoid wars (genetically).

    19. Re:Talent pool by houghi · · Score: 1

      managements ability

      And there lies the difference. We look at the people doing the running, not the people that tell them how and when to run. In sports we do not look at the management, we look at the people on the field.
      If you would compare that to chess, we would be looking how you move the pieces, not why.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    20. Re:Talent pool by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Baseball & other sports take more mental prowess than you seem to think, at least on the professional level. A lot of a teams success can hang on managements ability to judge the other team, their own personnel & how they use their personnel.

      Not really. What happens is that when all the other significant factors of co-ordination, physical fitness and practice, practice, practice have been pushed to the utter extremes by being taken to the high levels of national and international competition, to the point where everybody is a brilliant athete and sportsman, then at that point the factors which are normally dwarfed by such things, e.g. choosing to send in one person in to bat next over another, start to become relevant. But with Chess, it's like that all the way down.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    21. Re:Talent pool by h4rm0ny · · Score: 2

      Also women competing directly with men is still somewhat a taboo

      And it will remain so until men stop having trouble dating someone who can beat them at something. Imagine the damage it would do the male demographic if women found a guy that earned more than them or could physically stand up to them as unattractive or started freaking out about not 'feeling womanly' anymore.

      When the choice is no longer between dating and success, you'll start seeing more successful women.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    22. Re:Talent pool by martyros · · Score: 1

      faints and deceptions

      Except that at the grandmaster level, there's no hiding anything. Both of you know exactly what the implications of each move are, strategically and tactically for several moves ahead.

      One of the biggest differences I've seen between actual warfare and chess, and it's a doozy, is the ability to do two things at once. Chess tactics essentially all boils down to taking advantage of that fact that you can only make one move at a time, by forcing your opponent to choose between the lesser of two bad options. And while there are certainly limitations in warfare you can take advantage of, only moving one soldier at a time isn't one of them.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    23. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not a good war simulation as both sides have the same 'weapons' and follow the same rules. Look at the US in Vietnam, Irag and Afghanistan - the best hardware in the world versus guys with AK47 and IEDs. Look at the war simulation in the Persian Gulf - the US was trashed and only 'won' after a restart with changed rules.The US wins all the battles but still loses the war.

      You play chess, the other side may be playing Go.

    24. Re:Talent pool by denzacar · · Score: 1

      I think that you missed the point of his comment about certain sport's similarity to warfare.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    25. Re:Talent pool by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      The same argument is sometimes applied to certain fields like math, etc., where men seem to be more successful than women. On average, men and women perform at the same level; the difference comes in the distribution. Men supposedly tend to cluster at the really high and really low levels, so while 4/5 of the best may be male, 4/5 of the very worst will also be male. It's a thought-provoking theory, and there is actually some evidence for it, but there is also plenty of evidence against it and it isn't one to make lightly. Like many other areas, it is likely really smart women are tragically funneled elsewhere or pushed to do something "more appropriate."

      More concretely, the concept that chess simulates war is simply outdated. Civilization, Warcraft III, and half the console games these days simulate war. Chess is an artful mastery of planning, brainpower, and pattern recognition that cannot be matched, but it's NOT warfare, not the way it matters.

      The natural tendency for men to be more aggressive (better suited to war) is bullshit anyway. Traditionally certain cultures have held chess in high regard, those same cultures (i.e. Russia) have not encouraged (actively discouraged) women from playing chess.

      I'm a reasonable chess player, I grew up in a chess playing culture - but only males were encouraged to play - girls would get shooed away. I used to play in a club, one of my best mates was one of the best players -- he offered to show my younger sister how to play one night. She whipped him. He never spoke to me again.

      More recently I've had some games with my mother - she's better than I am. When I commented on that she remarked that "just because we don't play, doesn't mean we can't, and that we don't watch".

    26. Re:Talent pool by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      faints and deceptions

      Thank you, now I see what was holding me back! :-D

      Seriously - what you wrote sounds like a big line of bullshit. The consequences of chess are fuck all - ditto the collateral damage. Where's the commitment in a board game? Sorry paintball fans - that isn't war either. Neither are any more warlike than watching a John Wayne movie. The closest thing to war is climbing in the ring, or calling out the dude with the tattooed forehead at the Rebels clubhouse.

    27. Re:Talent pool by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      Baseball & other sports take more mental prowess than you seem to think, at least on the professional level. A lot of a teams success can hang on managements ability to judge the other team, their own personnel & how they use their personnel.

      Not really. What happens is that when all the other significant factors of co-ordination, physical fitness and practice, practice, practice have been pushed to the utter extremes by being taken to the high levels of national and international competition, to the point where everybody is a brilliant athete and sportsman, then at that point the factors which are normally dwarfed by such things, e.g. choosing to send in one person in to bat next over another, start to become relevant. But with Chess, it's like that all the way down.

      You have a good point there. Be it fighting, playing pool or chess, or running a marathon - once you get to a certain level of knowledge, ability, and experience - it becomes, to quote John Wayne (the 8 ball player, yes really) "90% psychology".

    28. Re:Talent pool by mswhippingboy · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that it IS a simulation of warfare - from the perspective of the decision makers in places like the pentagon. They are about as removed from the horrors of the battlefield as a 16-year old playing chess.

      --
      Sometimes the light at the end of the tunnel is the headlight of an oncoming train.
    29. Re:Talent pool by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      About woman... Woman has no nuts. This basic thing you should learn at lest from movies. In case of danger - man will attack, woman will do whatever else to survive. That expands to the males with woman brain also. Of course, any rule has exceptions. But this is thinking by overall categories and marks.

      What makes sense is bullshit - and the rest makes no sense.

      Leave you television and your movies. Go outside. Consider traveling to other countries. You seriously delusional.

    30. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Multiple fronts? What - being attacked from below, or above or behind? Having spies in your camp? The last time chess was relevant to war was in WWI with its trench system.

    31. Re:Talent pool by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      No. By population I meant the number of relevant people, not actual world population. In this case population A would be males playing chess and population B would be females playing chess, and it's safe to say there are many more males playing chess [competitively] than females.

      All I'm trying to show is that correlation (men taking the top ranks) doesn't imply causation (men being better at chess because they're aggressive or something).

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    32. Re:Talent pool by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Chess is a tactical competition where two opposing sides must utilize resources with different strengths and weakness, protect multiple fronts, and make strategic sacrifices, including faints and deceptions to attempt to annihilate one another.

      How is baseball not all of these things as well?

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    33. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The underlying concepts of the games you listed, including chess, are pretty much the same. What is your basis for saying chess is not a war simulation? Lack of explosions?

      No random element. Chess would be perfect if it just included a dice.

    34. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many of the world's top competitive Starcraft players are chicks?

      You've confused males that play computer games (a lot) with men in general - and now you're trying to bring women into the equation?

    35. Re:Talent pool by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Well there's Monster chess: http://www.chessvariants.org/unequal.dir/monster.html

      Another big difference between actual warfare and chess is with the latter you don't have to have a supply and logistics system to provide shelter, food, water etc to your pawns ;).

      --
    36. Re:Talent pool by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Chess is an artful mastery of planning, brainpower, and pattern recognition that cannot be matched

      It is matched and exceeded by the game of Go. The game of Chess has long since been conquered by AIs, but the game of Go has thus far proved stubbornly resistant to the sorts of AIs which conquered Chess. In fact, the Go AIs are so relatively weak that even an average human player, with only a couple years of experience, can easily defeat the AI, even with a substantial handicap. Chess is a game based upon a coincidental historical context, but it is sometimes said that if there are intelligent beings elsewhere in this universe, they too play Go.

    37. Re:Talent pool by Amorymeltzer · · Score: 1

      Apples and oranges. Vastly more effort has been put into chess AI than go, but I will also say that I feel the game play of chess lends itself to AI better than go does. That doesn't really mean anything, though, because how well a computer can do something is a poor metric for gameplay, and doesn't make something "easier" or "more complex." The worst of computers can easily calculate 684681x32168794x984635131 while the best of computers has a hard time with "Bob really likes Sue but is trying to hide it from Joe." Computers can whoop me at chess and Super Mario Brothers, but I can drive a car better. Sure, computers may be better at chess than go, but that doesn't have to mean anything for us. We're not computers and computers aren't human, and while closing the divide is fascinating it isn't always relevant.

      --
      I live in constant fear of the Coming of the Red Spiders.
    38. Re:Talent pool by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      The work that went into Chess AIs has translated to many other games and has been useful in the development of AIs in general. The game tree of Go is too large to be solved by simply searching for the best move. No matter how fast computers become they will never be powerful enough to exhaustively search the game tree of Go. In fact, numerical estimates show that the number of possible games of Go far exceeds the number of atoms in the known universe. Why is this interesting? Well, Many situations that occur in real life, including the car driving analogy that you made, also have very large numbers of discreet "positions" or "instances". The game of Go rather nicely abstracts and isolates much of what makes these sorts of problems "hard" for current AIs without allowing context sensitive or coincidental concerns to obscure the essential essence of that complexity.

      As for the argument that Go has not been solved simply because of lack of effort or interest in the AI or Computer Science community, that's simply not true. The fact that Go AIs are so much less effective than their Chess counterparts is not due to lack of effort or understanding of the problem by the AI community. In fact, recent efforts have seen some substantial improvements in Go playing AIs, but these are not the sorts of qualitative breakthroughs that would signal real progress towards a definitive solution. A truly effective Go AI will most almost certainly require fundamentally new and different approaches and as with Chess, these new techniques will likely find many more useful applications outside of just playing Go.

    39. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When knitting and yoga become competitive sports, we'll see women dominating those events. /ducks/

      Seriously, not sure why those two perpetually hip activities are largely dominated by women.

    40. Re:Talent pool by cinderellamanson · · Score: 0

      My daughter used to kick the shit out of my son at chess until she figured out "women don't play as well or as much or whatever", it's headlines like this that make it - not fucking worth it, for little girls as young as 4 years old. If there was a chess tournament at her school though I'm sure she'd be in the top performers easy.

      --
      Hey buddy, can i bum a karma? ~}CinderellaManson{~
    41. Re:Talent pool by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      More boys are born than girls, even more so in countries like India and China where girls are more likely to be aborted. However women live longer than men.

    42. Re:Talent pool by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Now I follow; you're saying that normalized for population size it could be that the actual skill bell curve (well, presuming it's something like a bell curve) for each gender has the same shape, and that the reason the population sizes differ may be something else not related to skill. Sorry, I misunderstood that point. I guess I tend to conflate the two because I see skill and motivation as intertwined; it's through motivation and drive that you become good at something, and it seems to me that if women aren't as interested in playing chess (since nothing stops them from playing, it seems reasonable to assume that their own lack of interest is what stops them), then 'therefore' they wouldn't be as driven to become as good either. Admittedly, we're probably in the realm of conjecture since I don't think there is too much scientific research covering this territory.

    43. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 1

      Not true.

      First, just because some people tune in to see atheltes doesn't remove the fact that professional sports has a huge mental aspect to it. On top of that most fans know what's going on in the game & have their own opinions on what should be done in the game. Yes it attracts people who casually watch to see the athleticism, but you can go deeper if you want to.

      Second, in many cases the manager/coach or owner of the team is as big a celebrity as the players(e.g. Lou Piniella, George Steinbrenner, Jerry Jones, Bill Belichick, Coach K, Phil Knight Phil Jackson, Urban Meyer, Chip Kelly..etc..etc..etc..).

    44. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 1

      Sports can have a mental aspect at any level. Even little league coaches try to out coach each other. Even a pick-up basketball game could be decided because the point guard knows how to control the game and feed players better. Perhaps chess could be more mentally demanding at some level, but there are many people who will not go beyond a basic understanding of chess where they know what moves each piece makes, but none of the advanced strategy unless they want to invest a massive amount of time into it.

    45. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with warfare and more to do with brain utilization & strategy used during a sport.

      George Carlin is pretty funny though.

    46. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said nothing about mental prowess, he was talking about SIMILARITY TO WARFARE.

    47. Re:Talent pool by kanto · · Score: 1

      And it will remain so until men stop having trouble dating someone who can beat them at something.

      It goes both ways since there are women who won't give the time of day to men who aren't in control. It's considered a loss of face for the woman if she succumbs too easily, who knows.

      There are cultures in which women are perceived to be the dominant sex and in those knowing the child's father doesn't usually play such a prominent role. Otherwise morals have mostly to do with insuring the continuity of the male line, hence the need to insure masculine supremacy; once you get over that hurdle the sky's the limit.

      Admittedly I don't believe much in the gender as being the predominant factor, our brains are far too complex and the way we are brought up makes all the difference.

    48. Re:Talent pool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the Yankees. They have the most money, so they buy the best athletes.

    49. Re:Talent pool by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Point is that the aspects we're discussing as being analogous to high-level warfare - analytical ability, recognition of strategic patterns from previous battles, keeping track of different strategies, guessing your opponent's aims and watching for traps - well these might form a small percentage of the key to success in something like baseball, and at the very highest levels of the game when you've maxed out all the other factors such as physical fitness, training, natural athletic potential, then it's something you have to focus on. But that doesn't make it a valid comparison to Chess where these traits are near 100% the factors that determine success.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    50. Re:Talent pool by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      ... That and the pressure to win and embarrass the opposing team through any legitimate means and sometimes on the edge of legitimate.

    51. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 1

      Baseball is an athletic competition, the only thing it has in common with combat is running.

      No, the point was not about warfare. It was someone being small minded and saying that baseball had nothing in common with warfare besides "running". Essentially he made it sound like sports had no mental aspect to it at all while chess was some holy grail, a teacher of battlefield mechanics which is also, wrong.

      Strategy plays a part in everyone's lives. From picking the quickest route home, to making business decisions. Strategy is everywhere. Chess is a strategy game. It really is about as similar to warfare as baseball is. Unlike chess war does have a lot to do with your troops physical fitness, training & troop morale doesn't play a part in war? You need a combo of both physical force & strategy. You could have the greatest strategist but if morale sucks or you have sick or injured troops, or ones who have not been trained to use their weapons you will probably lose.

      Chess & baseball are good mental and physical exercise(okay maybe baseball doesn't have a ton of physical exercise), but if we're comparing them to war they are so simplified from war that it'd be silly to suggest a chess champion would make a good war strategist, as much as it would be to say a great manager of a baseball team would as well.

    52. Re:Talent pool by Klinky · · Score: 1

      Yep, money/player talent is everything, which must be why they didn't win the World Series this year...

    53. Re:Talent pool by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "The consequences of chess are fuck all - ditto the collateral damage. Where's the commitment in a board game? "

      That is entirely dependent on the players. People have died over virtual objects in World of Warcraft, the consequence and the commitment is entirely one of perspective.

    54. Re:Talent pool by shaitand · · Score: 1

      You mean other than not having notable resource limitations (beyond recruitment), lacking anything resembling a front, not making any sacrifices, and there being faints, deceptions, or the use a point system rather than annihilating opposition?

      Dunno. Baseball is about a blunt and direct as you get. Don't get me wrong, there is a great deal of skill involved and there are important judgments. They just aren't of the same variety for the most part. There is a certain amount of tactics in any sport devised and played by men. They all exist as a sort of training for actual warfare. Baseball is just pretty far from that root as sports go.

    55. Re:Talent pool by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      "The consequences of chess are fuck all - ditto the collateral damage. Where's the commitment in a board game? "

      That is entirely dependent on the players. People have died over virtual objects in World of Warcraft, the consequence and the commitment is entirely one of perspective.

      After due consideration, and thinking back to my youth when I allowed a flatmate to host "Empires At Arms" games.... I'll concede to war-like ;-p

    56. Re:Talent pool by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      notable resource limitations

      25 men on a roster. Once one leaves he can't come back. Notable enough to have caused a recent All Star Game to have ended in a tie for the first time in history.

      lacking anything resembling a front

      Except the back of the infield. And the outfield fence. And the four bases.

      sacrifices

      So why do they call them "sacrifice flies" and "sacrifice bunts?"

      faints, deceptions

      Like bunting for a hit? Or making a bench move to force a pitching change? Or hell, pitching as a whole? How about baserunning as a whole? Seriously, I could go on like this all day, but I think the point's been made.

      annihilating opposition

      Chess is in no way about "annihilating opposition." It is about achieving checkmate. You must not be terribly good at chess.

      You obviously don't know dick about baseball.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
  3. A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In what way is a completely unfounded "theory" about fundamental differences between the genders relevant to this story? And no, being "cited in [a] university study" does not validate any theory. Let's get as far as "demonstrated in peer-reviewed scientific research" before flippantly tossing in irrelevant, offensive, uninformed, and dangerous "theories".

    1. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Men and women are exactly the same and equal in every single way conceivable and the only reason there are more or less women in one field or recreation than another or why there are any perceived differences in aptitude or interest are purely due to evil, vile, horrible, sexist, chauvinist, males. (Oh, don't forget that women make up something like 55% of the population, so they're hardly in a "minority" position on anything).

    2. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by MintOreo · · Score: 2
      If I had Mod Points I'd mod you up. Today it's become so taboo to even hint that there are any differences between males and females that doing so social suicide. It's ridiculous. Perhaps we can subvert this by calling men testosterone and women estrogen.

      New summary:

      No one really knows why the best estrogen players are typically not as good at chess as the testosterone players. One theory, common among some top testosterone players, is that testosterone usually induces more aggressive behavior by nature than estrogen, and is therefore the better suited hormone for a game that simulates warfare. Another, cited in at least one university study, is that the talent pool among estrogen filled players has not been big enough to produce many great players."

    3. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's hardly believable. Any war history talks opposite. In any war winner makes man as slaves or simply eliminates them. Woman was always preserved, - no matter is it the same race or not. That is in the civil war, not atomic explosions are meant.
      So, the question is: why than woman not outperforms man, if woman almost always survive ? That's because of genetically - woman is meant to hold. Man is meant to hunt, throw. It's so simply and so difficult to understand at the same time. This topic gets clear to everybody only after years. For someones there is life needed. Somebody understands it from the birth. So - those ones who understand it from the birth, becomes leaders, kings. For other ones the shame comes really fast, if their mother do not preserves them from jail.

    4. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by Ambvai · · Score: 1

      Every single way conceivable? Just a random thought, but it's sure a lot easier to put somebody into shock by twisting testicles on a male than a female...

    5. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1
      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    6. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by martyros · · Score: 2

      due to evil, vile, horrible, sexist, chauvinist, males.

      No, in any group that becomes a significant majority -- be it male, female, white, Christian, atheist, or whatever -- will tend, without active prcoesses counteracting it, to discriminate in subtle and not-so-subtle ways against the minority. An atheist in an all-Christian setting, or a Christian in an all-Muslim setting, or a white guy in an all-African-American setting, or a guy in an all-girl setting (e.g., social work) -- all of them will tend to experience discrimination. There will always be a range of people -- some who actively combat it, and try to be inclusive, some who are total assholes to the minorities and don't feel bad about it, and a mix of people in between. How the minorities fare will depend on the distribution of the people in the majority.

      And I have to say, in my experience, CS guys, and especially FLOSS guys, suck at this. Instead of keeping an open mind, actively looking for any roadblocks which may limit women becoming involved, and rooting those out, the vast majority of men I see respond just like you do. They jump to the simplest and most convenient explanation without actually talking to a woman or looking at the facts, and then get defensive and refuse to consider another perspective.

      Think of it this way. Even if it were the case that there is a biological component to the different performance between men and women in certain fields (chess, computers, math, &c), isn't it possible that there are also other causes, which are sociological in nature, and therefore can (and should) be changed? And wouldn't it make sense to do whatever we can to try to remove those barriers, so that women who do have the ability can participate and contribute?

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    7. Re:A soapbox for armchair gender theorists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whites and blacks are exactly the same and equal in every single way conceivable and the only reason there are more or less blacks in one field or recreation than another or why there are any perceived differences in aptitude or interest are purely due to evil, vile, horrible, racist, chauvinist, whites. (Oh, don't forget that blacks make up something like one third of the population, so they're hardly in a "minority" position on anything).

  4. Merry Christmas by BertieBaggio · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Classy Slashdot, real classy. You post a news item about the youngest female chess champion and spend half the summary wondering about why the best female players are not typically as good at chess as the best men. Admittedly, it's only verbatim reposting of part of TFA (thanks NYT for also being classy!). Would another part not have done? Say,

    Ms. Hou said that she received training and financial support from the Chinese government. She studies chess four to five hours a day, and also attends high school. She said that she sometimes fell behind in her work, but her teachers understood and tried to help her out.

    or if you really wanted to talk about men

    The record among men is held by Garry Kasparov, who became world champion in 1985, when he was 22.

    Now, I don't have a problem with the facts, if the top women are indeed not as good at chess as the top men. But it seems rather small to spend half the summary pontificating on that rather than telling us a bit more about the champion.

    No one really knows why Slashdot posts summaries that are at best disingenuous and at worst deliberately inflammatory. One theory, common among top Slashdotters is that inflammatory stories get more comments than report-the-facts posts.

    Rant over, I really need to lighten up. Merry Christmas all!

    --
    If all you have is a grenade, pretty soon every problem looks like a foxhole -- MightyYar
    1. Re:Merry Christmas by noidentity · · Score: 2

      Agreed. Summaries should summarize the story, and leave pontification, speculation, spin, and opinions for the comments. Putting these into the summary turns it into essentially a blog posting, where a single person shares their opinion on a topic and sets the tone for the discussion. Nothing wrong with blog postings, as long as they're made to a blog.

    2. Re:Merry Christmas by PatPending · · Score: 4, Funny

      Rant over, I really need to lighten up. Merry Christmas all!

      Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good knight.

      --
      What one fool can do, another can. (Ancient Simian Proverb)
    3. Re:Merry Christmas by chelsel · · Score: 1

      The computers have us beat anyway last time I checked. And, yes, Merry Christmas.

    4. Re:Merry Christmas by donscarletti · · Score: 2

      You post a news item about the youngest female chess champion and spend half the summary wondering about why the best female players are not typically as good at chess as the best men.

      Given that she neither played the world's best male player nor the person believed to be the best female player (but who only plays against men), it is relevant to speculate where this player fits in with the rest of the population.

      --
      When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
    5. Re:Merry Christmas by hackingbear · · Score: 3, Funny

      No one really knows why Slashdot posts summaries that are at best disingenuous and at worst deliberately inflammatory. One theory, common among top Slashdotters is that inflammatory stories get more comments than report-the-facts posts.

      Because the summary is written by a male who is "usually more aggressive by nature".

    6. Re:Merry Christmas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually no, the last tournament had programmers tweaking the machine as it played. That's cheating as far as I'm concerned. The machine did not win on its own.

    7. Re:Merry Christmas by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      or if you really wanted to talk about men

      The record among men is held by Garry Kasparov, who became world champion in 1985, when he was 22.

      To be honest, that comparison is just stupid.

      The article has already established that best female chess player isn't as good as the best male chess player, yet somehow it's supposed to be more impressive winning the "female world championship"?

      That's like saying "The new Danish national champion is only 16 years old. The youngest world champion was 22."

      I have the same issue with any kind of competition where men and women can compete on equal terms. Scrabble, card games, Trivial Pursuit, Rubik's cube, lottery, bingo etc.

    8. Re:Merry Christmas by WalksOnDirt · · Score: 1

      If you're referring to Kasparov vs Deep Blue, the software was only known to be tweaked between games. This has been considered fair. The computer did have some minor unfair advantages, though.

      Even if you feel Deep Blue cheated though, Kramnik, the world's champion, still lost to Fritz a few years ago. Fritz wasn't even the best program at the time, and the advantages were in Karmnik's favor, too. Nearly all GMs acknowledge that computers are stronger than them today.

      --
      a,e,i,o,u and sometimes w and y (at be if of up cwm by)
    9. Re:Merry Christmas by BeanThere · · Score: 2

      Newsflash, slashdot is a blog.

      And the summaries are always spun to generate lively discussion, funny how it only suddenly makes a whole lot of people uncomfortable when the topic is one of society's great "taboo" subjects - the fact of gender inequality (earth round) in the face of a global cultist belief that genders are equal (world is flat).

    10. Re:Merry Christmas by DamienRBlack · · Score: 1
    11. Re:Merry Christmas by houghi · · Score: 1

      Stop whining. You are such a girl.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    12. Re:Merry Christmas by martyros · · Score: 1

      the fact of gender inequality (earth round) in the face of a global cultist belief that genders are equal (world is flat).

      Except that the vast majority of tech men, in my experience, don't believe that apparent differences in performance have more to do with sociology than with biology. The conclusion almost everyone jumps to, without looking at the actual evidence, is, "Well, maybe men are just better than women". Bzzzt. There is a lot of evidence for alternate explanations, but most techies I've talked to just don't want to hear it.

      So Slashdot bringing up the maybe-women-arent-as-good-at-chess idea is playing to the crowd, not challenging a cultist belief.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    13. Re:Merry Christmas by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is representative of the whole of society now? That's news to me.

      How about the differences in performance in athletic endeavors and physical strength and physical size and height, or are there "alternative" explanations for those too? To think that men are equal to women is a bit like denying the sky is blue.

    14. Re:Merry Christmas by martyros · · Score: 1

      Slashdot is representative of the whole of society now?

      No, you said that people get worked up when we talk about taboos. But on Slashdot, my experience is the idea that men are just better than women at computers / math / chess is not taboo, but very welcome.

      To think that men are equal to women is a bit like denying the sky is blue.

      I don't think anyone thinks men and women are the same. But think of it this way.

      Suppose, for the sake of arugment, that the only reason there are fewer top women in chess (or computers) is that there are biological differences, either in ability or in inclination. If that's the case, then there's not really anything we can or should do about it. That's just the way things are. We can continue doing things the way we've always done them without feeling bad about it.

      Suppose, on the other hand, that there's no biological difference between men and women wrt chess, and the only reason there are fewer top women in chess is that there's a cultural bias such that fewer women consider studying chess: i.e., chess is a "boy thing" and fewer women are likely to try to take it up. In that case, no one has really done anything "wrong", but it's still the case that the chess world is actually losing out -- there are women out there that could have been a Kasparov or a Kramnik, but didn't simply because they didn't try chess. If that's the case, it makes sense to try to do more to recruit younger women, encourage them to play, and to combat the cultural bias. In that way, the chess community as a whole will benefit.

      Suppose, however, that there actually is a subtle discrimination in the chess world that, even if not intentional, persistently discourages women from becoming involved. Men think women aren't as good; and so they treat women in subtle ways as if they aren't going to be very good; and so women pick that up, and expect not to be very good. Maybe when Gary Kasparov was just starting, there was a young girl Katrina in the same class, who had the same native talent as Gary. But because she was a girl, she got less attention from her chess coach, and less encouragement; and because of that, didn't excel; and ended up enjoying chess as a hobby, but never studied it seriously, and thus never became a grandmaster*. For every Hou Yifan, who seriously set to study chess, there may be a dozen Katrinas, who have a huge amount of talent and begin with a mild interest but end up discouraged and never go far; or, they get involved but they never have the confidence that men do -- for the simple reason that they're treated differently than men. If that's the case, then again, the chess world is losing out in a big way -- and not only that, the attitude of "Maybe men are just better at women than chess" is actively harmful, not only to the women, but to the chess community as a whole.

      Worse yet, suppose (hypothetically) that the real reason there aren't as many successful women in chess is that there's entrenched sexism -- a "boys club" that makes sexist jokes and generally makes it unpleasant for a woman to be involved in serious chess. Then for every Hou Yifan who can put up with the sexism, there will be three or four who give up in disgust. (Even Hou Yifan is young -- she may yet give up in disgust.) If that's the situation, then not only is chess missing out, but there's something actively wrong going on, and we really have a moral obligation to try to correct it.

      Now, I'm not really involved in the chess community; but it seems likely to me that the reason there aren't as many grandmaster women in chess is likely to be some combination of all of these. Because the biological explanation is actually harmful if it causes prejudice, it's better if we first look to all the other ones, and only believe it if it's been proven scientifically (i.e., taking a random sample of children and enrolling them all in chess programs). Even then, we sho

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    15. Re:Merry Christmas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha, that's funny, you sure pwned the OP

    16. Re:Merry Christmas by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I get annoyed at any summary when it spins the topic. "News for nerds. Stuff that matters." to me means summaries of tech-related news items, so that we can discuss them. Putting spin on it just tilts the entire discussion to the submitter's whims. But maybe you're right, and this is just shared blog.

    17. Re:Merry Christmas by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the post. I read it carefully, and am saving it away for future reference.

  5. They shouldn't allow this by countertrolling · · Score: 2

    Getting your kid involved in dangerous stunts like these is uncalled for. This kid could've choked on a game piece, or something

    --
    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    1. Re:They shouldn't allow this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The consensus from numerous government studies suggest that chess leads to pawnography.

  6. Homosexual chess players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While heterosexuals begin with a king and a queen, homosexuals start with two kings or two queens. Unfortunately they have trouble mating, so they never actually win.

    1. Re:Homosexual chess players by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Funny

      Chess is also racist because white always goes first.

    2. Re:Homosexual chess players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Only someone who sees (classifies) people by the color of their skin would make such a statement.

  7. Surely they can't be serious... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While the sex breakdown of high level chess players is interesting, the idea that the sort of adaptations that suit a primate for small-group physical violence are good for a board game seems risible at best. If anything, I'd ask the question "How is it that some males manage to overcome adaptations suited to physical violence and sit still, for long periods of time, performing abstract mental operations as dispassionately as possible?(and, particularly at the middle and high school levels, many don't, which is why they are out on the playground punching each other and being diagnosed with ADD rather than in class...)"

    It is never a good sign for a theory when it can be turned into a persuasive sounding "just-so story" for either possible outcome: Since the leaderboard is full of men, you get "zOMG, chess is a wargame!". Were it full of women, you'd get "zOMG, chess is dispassionate and does not reward aggression!"(or, the other possibility, the evolutionary psychology brigade would march in to inform us that chess' brand of cerebral competition is well matched to women's well-known propensity for sophisticated verbal and interpersonal competition and alliance formation and poorly suited to men's more straightforward brand of violence).

    There is obviously something going on; but I'd suspect that it is much more closely connected to whatever it is, social or biological, that drives the sex breakdown of high level mathematics departments; not whatever it is that drives the sex breakdown of combat units.

    1. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      The reason why there are so many better male chess players than women chess players is because there are a lot more boys and men playing chess than women.

      Go to a major chess club some time and look at the sex ratio.

    2. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by davester666 · · Score: 5, Informative

      When I've gone to chess clubs, the ratio of people having sex vs not having sex at the club, is pretty much always 0 to X [X being the number of people at the club].

      But I did not spend a lot of time in the washrooms, so the ratio might be slightly higher than what I observed.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    3. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the question would then go into asking why there are more males playing chess than females.

      Or, you know. Games in general? I'm generalizing with no evidence backing my claims, but it feels like most games, electronic or otherwise, seem to have a greater amount of males than females.

      Come on slashdot! Agree with me so we can armchair analysis something without looking for any factual backing to support our claims, instead relying on anecdotal evidence to further our prejudices!

      I can't tell when I stop being serious and start trolling anymore...

    4. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "...as dispassionately as possible?"

      Actually most men waste a majority of their time and energy on pissing contests.

    5. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry. We're not allowed to talk about the possibility of there being differences between men's and women's capacity for mathematics and intensive abstract logical reasoning. It's taboo, and politically incorrect. In certain quarters, you could probably lose your job for mentioning it.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    6. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

      I'm fairly sure that we are talking about it. I was expressing my position that, if anything, the capacity of a fairly small slice of the male population for high order logical function(while undeniable) seems unlikely to be linked in any but the most cryptic ways to adaptations useful for physical violence and intra or inter group competitive behavior.

      It does appear that there is something going on, and it may not be all social; but appeals to adapted aggression seem more useful in explaining prison sex ratios than chessmaster ones...

    7. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Kagura · · Score: 2

      The reason why there are so many better male chess players than women chess players is because there are a lot more boys and men playing chess than women.

      The reason why there are so many better male swimmer/runner/marathoners than women is because there are a lot more boys and men doing these activities than women.

      Or maybe men and women are not equally capable in all endeavors.

    8. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by NoSig · · Score: 1

      That is a possible reason though it does not follow that it is necessarily the right or most relevant reason. E.g. if we imagine that people who are good at chess at first go on to play more chess, we suddenly have a completely different perspective on the ratio of men to women. There is no reason to assume that choosing to play chess is independent of one's innate ability to learn chess - in fact I'd say that would be surprising. Your argument does show that there is a possible explanation that does not rely on men being naturally better at chess than women.

    9. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sexual selection at work, though we've somehow forgotten we're supposed to be impressing the chicks instead of putting them off. I blame civilisation.

    10. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

      (and, particularly at the middle and high school levels, many don't, which is why they are out on the playground punching each other and being diagnosed with ADD rather than in class...)"

      Where exactly are you talking about? They've cut recess down at lower levels, and out of middle school+

    11. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by ProfessorPillage · · Score: 1

      They are serious... And don't call me Shirley.

    12. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Psychotria · · Score: 1

      Have a look at the prize money offered to men vs. the prize money offered to women.

    13. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      If anything, I'd ask the question "How is it that some males manage to overcome adaptations suited to physical violence and sit still, for long periods of time, performing abstract mental operations as dispassionately as possible?

      Why are you conflating physical violence with mental strategizing capabilities? Both are complementary adaptations critical to winning wars.

    14. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Informative???
      Funny, sure. But not particularly informative.

    15. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I have a daughter, am going to get her into to a sport. Why??? Their are sports where women have more scholarships then eligible applications in which the men fight for a handful of scholarships. Why because the schools have to keep the amount of male to female athletes equal. Not equal spending but number of athletes.

    16. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      Physiologically, men are more powerful than women (on average, and at the higher end of the bell curve as well).

      But when you have a sex ratio of 10 men to 1 women, even if they both average out the same, chances are the "best" will come out of the male distribution group. Just basic math.

      As far as I can tell, having played chess at the amateur club level and played some really good young players (2100+), both boys and girls, there is no secret sauce in chess that resides in the gonads.

    17. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever gone hunting? It requires extended periods of patitence and awareness of environment. If you can't sit very still, you're going to scare the deer away. You need to examine the terrain, the wind, watch for any other activity. It's actually very good training for chess. Likewise with the game of football.

      I suspect that the lack of female interest in chess is more cultural than biological, but I certainly wouldn't rule out the later as a contributing factor. My daughter (age 7) plays chess, but she isn't your typical little girl, either. And even with better instruction at home, she's not nearly as good as I was at her age.

    18. Re:Surely they can't be serious... by lakeland · · Score: 1

      Somebody else noted that the standard deviation of ability of male chess players is higher but the mean is roughly equal, and that a similar property exists in mathematics, go and quite a few other pursuits. So I would posit the theory that males are more inclined to obsessive behaviour while females tend to have more balanced lives, but neither has inherently more aptitude for chess.

  8. Misleading title is misleading by Xonstantine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not the world's chess champion, but the women's chess champion, which is altogether a lesser prize because the level of competition is so much lower.

  9. Women by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    As a male, the only thing that ultimately matters to me is that women are the chest champions.

  10. Summary is sexist, story is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Women's world champion" is meaningless. Not only is the level of competition WAY lower (something like 200 ELO, which is massive), the article (correctly) points out that there's only one "best woman chess player" and it's not the current champion. Polgar is in a class by herself, and doesn't play in women's events because she'd obliterate the competition. So...someone set a new record for beating everyone...except men...or that one really good woman. In other news, I am the world's strongest man...if you exclude men...and women who are strong...and that one chick who isn't really that strong but is stronger than me anyway.

    1. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      I am told that one gets better at chess by playing better chess players. If this is so, then two groups with different chess skills would stay that way. Call it history and positive feedback.

    2. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by Hikaru79 · · Score: 2

      In chess there are no such thing as men's tournaments -- women can join any tournament. It is just men who cannot play in women's tournaments. So the argument that women simply are barred the opportunity to play against stronger competition doesn't hold water. In fact, Hou Yifan herself has played in many large tournaments with mixed genders, but has never done as well as she does in women's only events.

    3. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      I am told there is a thing called "chess software" that allows even a child in a remote part of Rwanda to not only play well above his skill level but to progressively select a skill level just above his own as he improves. I am also told there is a thing called "the Internet" that allows players to play against any other player in the entire world at any time, regardless of location, provided they have "Internet access".

    4. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by martyros · · Score: 1

      but has never done as well as she does in women's only events.

      You mean, she hasn't played as well (i.e., her ability seems lower), or she hasn't placed as well (i.e., many people placed higher than her)?

      If she (or other women) actually play less well at mixed-gender events, I'd suspect some kind of subtle (or not-so-subtle) sexist overtones that made it uncomfortable for women.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    5. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by milkasing · · Score: 1

      Weaker woman's tournaments are the reason, Judit Polgar, the strongest ever woman chess player does not compete in women's only tournaments. On the flip side, I seem to recall her sister, Susan Polgar (who was a Woman's world champion herself) write in favor of having a woman's only field as well. Her argument was having only mixed tournaments, would lead to vicious cycle. Basically, she thought that if there were no women's only tournaments, a lot of women players would perform badly and a lot of them would not get a chance to qualify to play, and as a result would drop out of chess.This would discourage a lot of women entering the field. The diminishing size of the pool of players would in turn lead to fewer high ranking womens players, and so on.

    6. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Mod up ++ (I'm out) Most everything posted here is dickwads arguing that the women who won't go near them are dumb, and thinking is a macho activity.

      "Women's world champion" is meaningless. Not only is the level of competition WAY lower (something like 200 ELO, which is massive), the article (correctly) points out that there's only one "best woman chess player" and it's not the current champion. Polgar is in a class by herself, and doesn't play in women's events because she'd obliterate the competition. So...someone set a new record for beating everyone...except men...or that one really good woman. In other news, I am the world's strongest man...if you exclude men...and women who are strong...and that one chick who isn't really that strong but is stronger than me anyway.

    7. Re:Summary is sexist, story is stupid by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      Fearless prognostication: Celebrity chess players and Chinese Government backing just might produce talented women players -- not 200 ELO trailing either.

  11. On Women by AmericanInKiev · · Score: 2, Interesting

    May I suggest politely, that women, in the main, have /two/ paths to success, (or evolutionary strategies) whilst men may have merely one.
    That is that Women can, by merely looking fabulous, simply attach themselves to the success of a /competent/ male, while few males have managed a similar trick in reverse, and that these two strategies compete with each other in a way that dilutes the pressure to be competent. Fabulous women out-compete women who are merely competent in propagating their genes. I would wonder whether, in any species, both genders can adopt the same evolutionary strategy, this is likely not the case, as sexual reproduction leads to mutual exploitation by definition (as each gender conspires to make the other partner more responsible for the child rearing)

  12. Youngest male champion? by milkasing · · Score: 3, Informative

    Kasparov at 22 became the youngest unified chess champion. But he is not the youngest ever -- Ruslan Ponomariov won the Fide chess championship in 2002 (during the split, in a knockout format).He was 18 at the time.

  13. China keeps coming by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

    I'm afraid we'll have to get used to "world records" from China.

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    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    1. Re:China keeps coming by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      and India too. Since 2.5 billion people live in the two countries, I would only expect that as time goes on most things of note done by humans would likely be done in one place or the other.

  14. Not a random sample of the population by izomiac · · Score: 1

    There's a trend in hunter-gatherer societies that males tend to be the hunters, while females are the gatherers. It turns out, each sex has advantages in these areas. Males tend to be much better at navigating while blindfolded, and females are much better at remembering which objects were in a room. Whether this is an adaptation to or a cause of the hunter-gatherer trend is debated.

    Back in college my evolution teacher said he used to try to illustrate these differences during lecture, but his students never showed any difference. For a while this puzzled him until he realized that upper level biology majors are not representative of the population at large. To get to that level of education you generally have to be adept at both skills.

    I would postulate that a similar situation is happening in chess. Women may be less aggressive as a whole, but I doubt you can say that specifically about women who excel at chess.

    1. Re:Not a random sample of the population by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3

      That is a very good point. In order to understand this sort of thing, you need to take a look at the very real differences between men and women. We do not fully understand what these differences are, but we know some of them. For example, when exposed to cold temperatures, men will die of hypothermia more rapidly than women, while women will get frostbite more rapidly than men. This results from the fact that women reduce the blood flow to the extremities more rapidly when exposed to the cold more rapidly than men do. This results in women maintaining their core body temperature longer.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    2. Re:Not a random sample of the population by commlinx · · Score: 1

      We do not fully understand what these differences are, but we know some of them.

      Men have a penis and women have a vagina, I remember reading that somewhere.

    3. Re:Not a random sample of the population by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Men actually exist, women are mythological creatures. That's quite a difference right there.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  15. idiotic male-female comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At the minimum you need to discount for the unequal population of male female 'serious' players (I'm assuming many more males play chess than females).
    Also maybe females just don't like chess as much (equally idiotic asking why more homosexuals males are better at fashion design than heterosexual males? straight guys generally don't get all excited by haute couture).

    1. Re:idiotic male-female comparison by rnj · · Score: 1

      It's true that there is simply a larger pool of male chess players.

      How about bridge though. No shortage of female players at the casual level or the club level or the tournament level.

      There are plenty of decent female professionals.

      There are very few who would be ranked in the top 20 or so in their country. In the US, Helen Sobel would have been on the short list of best players in the US in her prime. And it was a lengthy prime. I don't think many would rank her above Shenken, but most would rank her above Charles Goren (her frequent partner).

      Dorothy Hayden formed a very strong partnership with B. J. Becker (a superb player who formed very strong partnerships with a pretty fair number of partners) for a few years (Becker would represent the US with a different partner a few years later. Hayden started to play primarily in women's events). Since then the only woman to represent the US at a top level was paying 5 world class players to support her (not that she's alone in buying a world title. More than a few men have done the same thing)

  16. Maybe, just maybe by ArchieBunker · · Score: 2

    Men and women are different?

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    1. Re:Maybe, just maybe by martyros · · Score: 1

      Men and women are different. However, a huge amount of the difference in outcomes between men and women are much better explained by sociology than by biology. Look at the evidence with an open mind sometime.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

  17. Not surprising by NoSig · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Chess requires high IQ, the variance (not average) of IQ (and lots of things) is higher among men than women so you get more male idiots and geniuses. In other words, more men are further away from the average than women - be that better or worse. Hence better top performers in many areas of human activity. Also, more male bottom performers. It's not exactly surprising that women have less variance since they have two different X chromosomes, so the effect of every gene on the X chromosome is the average of two genes from the gene pool, while in men the effect of every gene on the X or Y chromosome is just the effect of 1 gene. So a good X or Y gene gets full effect in a man and a bad X or Y gene gets full effect in a man. In a woman the X genes have two copies so both bad and good genes are likely to be counteracted by the second copy of that gene on the other chromosome. Women don't have a Y chromosome which also means they can't differ in their Y chromosome, again reducing variance.

    1. Re:Not surprising by anilg · · Score: 1

      Interesting theory if you buy the premise that random X and Y chromosomes are on average more different than two random X chromosomes, and thus lead to a larger degree of mutations.

      Can someone with some knowledge in genetics/related fields comment.

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
    2. Re:Not surprising by ShooterNeo · · Score: 2

      There aren't very many genes on the Y chromosome, so that part of your theory is not correct.

      View it from another perspective : evolutionary psychology. Generation after generation, in the natural environment, 80% of women succeed in reproducing but only 40% of men. Thus, men have to take risks for a greater chance at being among the 40%. (the giant difference is due to men dying before reproducing doing risky activities, and from competition from other men. Genetic evidence is that polygamy (a few dominant men taking all the women in a tribe) is the natural state of affairs)

      The actual way this risk taking is implemented in the genetic code is more complex : hormones and protein factors from the Y chromosome are obviously activating genetic code stored on the other chromosomes resulting in both risk taking by the nervous system and riskier choices by the body.

    3. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what GP is referring to is a phenomenon in women were half their cells act on one of the X chromosomes and the other half act of the other. This would produce an should produce an averaging of X chromosomes.

    4. Re:Not surprising by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Even without specific genetic programming the necessity of risk-taking and hard work to get laid would motivate men to perform better. Playing chess isn't the first thing that would come to mind to reach that goal, but maybe they are thinking several moves ahead...

    5. Re:Not surprising by NoSig · · Score: 1

      There aren't very many genes on the Y chromosome, so that part of your theory is not correct.

      It is true that the X and Y chromosomes together hold just a small part of total DNA in a human. It is also true that the difference in DNA between a human and a chimp is just 4%, and from your argument we would then have to conclude that monkeys perform to about the level of humans. So it is not valid to conclude that a small difference in DNA can't be important. I agree with the rest of your post, and I imagine that that is part of the reason that men have greater genetic risk/reward - because reaping the possible rewards is more important than the downside because being average is a failing strategy for men.

    6. Re:Not surprising by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Between 70 and 200 genes (depending on the study) on the Y chromosome. Versus about 23,000 genes in the full codebase (plus some spacers and other bits of junk that influence gene expression)

      The OP speculated that the reason some men have very high IQ is solely due to influence of that Y chromosome. I'm saying this is unlikely to be the reason : the Y chromosome's codebase is too small, and most of the genes there are critical, and don't have many versions out there.

      You are correct, though : just one gene could make a huge difference. However, for various reasons related to the very trait we are talking about (intelligence), I don't think the reason men sometimes have higher intelligence is due to this chromosome alone.

    7. Re:Not surprising by NoSig · · Score: 1

      It's not the Y chromosome alone, it is both the X and Y chromosome together. Women don't even have the Y chromosome, but they also have two copies active of each X gene while men have only one. Also, I'm not saying this is the only reason, I'm saying that since this is the case, it is not surprising if men are more varied than women, as indeed they are.

    8. Re:Not surprising by ShooterNeo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that would explain quite a bit, actually. The X chromosome is huge. If it has genes on it influencing intelligence, then with no averaging you would end up with people that are either very smart or very stupid.

  18. And the youngest woman slashdotter is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, are there girls here?

  19. is it better in America? by DavMz · · Score: 1

    Because you think that American or European top gymnasts achieve their feats with no sacrifice? And what happens to those who don't make it to the olympic team? Professional sport is probably the most competitive activity one can imagine, and vae victis.

    1. Re:is it better in America? by wan9xu · · Score: 3, Informative

      yes, because the american kids often--though not always--have a conscious choice whether to put effort into the competition. and these kids also receive the same education, if they choose to, as every other kid.

      you have to realize that chinese society is highly competitive because of the population. education is a constant battle among peers. talents like the girl in this article was "manufactured" for lack of a better word. they were picked out at an early age and entered into the athlete training system, in which hard training is the routine day in and day out because these kids are also competing within themselves for the top spot in sports. only a few make it--good for them. the rest end up being dropped out.

      problem is that the athlete manufacturing system has a different--reduced--education curriculum. in china standardized exams dictate where students stand in job markets, and a different curriculum spells doom for those not taught as such. this reduced curriculum makes it very hard for the athlete dropouts to merge back into the ordinary crowd to compete. the later the dropout, the worse, since they wasted more time on athletic training.

      any visible international competition has its counterpart training program in china. aside from sports, there's also programs for math olympiad, physics, computer sciente, etc. kids in those programs fare better because those subjects are within the academic curriculum and are valued by the chinese universities.

      i know, because i was one of them.

    2. Re:is it better in America? by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      define: choice?
      define: choosing.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  20. What other studies show by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No one really knows why the best female players are typically not as good at chess as the best men.

    Past studies have shown that the range of men's brains is wider. Thus both the smartest and dumbest people alive tend to be men. Men are not only wired to take more risks, but their physiology also seems to toss the dice further when putting their genes together.

    In mammalian groups, typically the reproductive quantity difference between the top male and bottom male is larger than that of females.

    This is because the top male can mate many times with multiple females, while the top female can only crank out and raise slightly more than her typical competition. Thus, the reproductive rewards and penalties are more extreme for males.

    This results in males being risk takers by personality and by construction. Recombinant DNA appears set up to take bigger gambles on male design; and this means that for any skill test, the more extremes of the spectrum will tend to be male.

  21. Gender differences - be happy! by bradley13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It isn't PC to discuss differences intelligence, even when there may be some truth to be found there. There is plenty of evidence that the mental abilities for men and women are slightly different - and a slight difference in the average population can turn into a big difference at the extremes. For example, men are, on average, better at manipulating 3D objects in their heads; they are also (again, on average) slightly better at mathematics. It is possible that this (or some other) particular facet of intelligence is applicable to chess.

    However, what I really wanted to point out is this: have you ever known really good, young chess players? The ones I have known are, frankly, not "normal". They are almost monomaniacal about chess. To become this obsessed about something may require a certain mental abnormality. Another mental difference: some studies have shown that women tend to be "saner" than men, meaning perhaps that they may be less susceptible to such obsessions.

    Last, random thought: why is it so non-PC to discuss differences in mental abilities? No one disputes that there are physical differences. We don't have men and women competing together in sports. Even where both may be equally good, the physical differences lead to completely different styles (think: floor gymnastics). We are built differently - why should it be surprising if our brains are wired differently too? To the contrary: Vive la difference!

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
    1. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Last, random thought: why is it so non-PC to discuss differences in mental abilities? No one disputes that there are physical differences. We don't have men and women competing together in sports. Even where both may be equally good, the physical differences lead to completely different styles (think: floor gymnastics). We are built differently - why should it be surprising if our brains are wired differently too? To the contrary: Vive la difference!

      Because the 'religion of the day' is that the genders are "equal", so it's pure blasphemy to point out the glaring facts.

    2. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by johnhp · · Score: 1

      Similarly, it's not politically correct to talk about how race is a major indicator of intelligence... despite being absolutely proven, with economic and societal levels controlled for.

    3. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Similarly, it's not politically correct to talk about how race is a major indicator of intelligence... despite being absolutely proven

      Massive citation needed there, unless you're just trolling. The only study I've seen correlating race and intelligence used IQ (which is somewhat ethnocentric) and only showed a deviation of 7 points for the peak of the bell curve between racial groups, which is nowhere near enough to be able to make any general observation about the expected intelligence of two individuals from two distinct racial groups. The study was also not controlled based on poverty or education level. This is the only study that I've ever seen cited by people making this claim, but if you have a better one then please present it.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      It isn't PC to discuss differences intelligence

      The best way to handle "non-PC" subjects is to discuss them anyway and ignore what people consider "PC". Fuck 'em. It's "voluntary" censorship on the parts of people who refuse to discuss certain subjects and that's fine, but not when they put you down for discussing someting they don't wish to discuss. Political Correctness is the hallmark of totalitarian governments and sociopaths.

    5. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by mangu · · Score: 1

      The only study I've seen correlating race and intelligence used IQ (which is somewhat ethnocentric)

      The *only* study you've ever seen correlating race and intelligence? Wow, you must have just arrived from an alien world, right?

      There have been gajillions studies published correlating race and intelligence. However, this field is so politically polarized that you cannot expect any coherence, either the studies are political propaganda or the reviews are political propaganda.

      This is an unfortunate situation, because it leaves the most vulnerable citizens to their own fate. It's funny how the PC crowd who insists to give equal access to buildings for people who have walking disabilities are the same who pretend that intelligence handicaps do not exist.

      If people drop out of school and have problems getting even a car detailing or fast food job, that's proof enough that they have some reasoning disability. Instead of arguing from a politically polarized opinion whether this is due to nature or nurture, shouldn't we try to find a solution for this problem?

      Arguing about "poverty or education level" biases is ridiculous, it disregards cause and effect. Poverty is much more likely to be a consequence of low intelligence than the cause, after all who wants to live in poverty? Same for education level, any smart person would work against odds to get an education. If you measure intelligence in such a way that all possible consequences of low intelligence are eliminated then, sure, you'll find that everyone has exactly the same intelligence level. But you aren't helping anyone that way.

      Let's try to find the cause of low intelligence. If it's racially related, then let's find a biochemical cure, if Africans, or any other genetic group, have low intelligence due to race, let's develop some medicine that will allow them to have normal intelligence.

      It's exactly the same as Northern Europeans need to treat their skins with sun blockers to avoid skin cancer in situations where people of African descent can tolerate the effects of the sun without ill effects. What's wrong with that?
       

    6. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Last, random thought: why is it so non-PC to discuss differences in mental abilities? No one disputes that there are physical differences. We don't have men and women competing together in sports. Even where both may be equally good, the physical differences lead to completely different styles (think: floor gymnastics). We are built differently - why should it be surprising if our brains are wired differently too? To the contrary: Vive la difference!

      It's non-PC for a few reasons. The first is the history of misuse of such research and discussions. Frankly, society has learnt its lesson that arguments about the "natural intelligence" of different races, genders and even social classes, have been falsely made, falsely justified and generally used to perpetuate injustice again and again. Is it possible that an over-reaction occurs? Perhaps, but it's marginally too far in one direction rather than the vast misdirection we've seen in the other direction through-out history. It is natural and right to be wary about re-occurences of such attitudes. What does being wary mean? It means whilst scientific research discussed by informed people might be fine, people making vague statements about races / genders / whatevers being less intelligent than others should be identified as what they are: ill-informed misrepresentation. Expanding on that brings us to the second point: accurate definitions of what is being talked about. You refer to manipulating 3D objects in your head. Maybe you are better at that than I am. This is something we can test. But it translates very badly into "you are more intelligent than I am". In fact, most things translate very badly into "intelligence" once you take them out of the context of scientific research and into the mainstream press. That's why it is taboo to start discussing differences in intelligence in the mainstream - because it becomes a bunch of dangerous innaccuracies the moment you take it away from people who actually understand what it's all about. If you're reading my reply in an adversarial mindset, you may be itching to reply that you wrote "mental abilities" not "intelligence". But I'm not responding to the question of whether 'bradley13' can discuss these things because you can. I'm responding to the general question of why it is so non-PC in the general case with the point that the moment you move to the general case, it's not you talking about rotating 3D models any more. It's someone saying "X is less intelligent than Y" (whilst the scientist who did the research has just had yet another lesson in dealing with the press).

      And expanding on our hypothetical news story of "X is less intellignt than Y" brings us to our third and greatest reason why such discussions are taboo: Generalities. Suppose women turn out to be 10% more "intelligent" (there's that word again) than men. On average. Or whatever specific metric you choose to use: learning languages, navigation, numeracy, whatever. What does that 10% higher average mean. What does 10% actually mean? If it were an evenly distributed 10% rise across the gender (absurd, and huge, but go with this), that means that it's something like a 5% chance of any given woman being smarter than any given man. Is it efficient to start generalising at that point rather than assessing each individual? No - it's ridiculous. Unless you were for some reason rounding up vast segments of the population with no quality control, it would be absurd to start choosing for intelligence by gender. And that's with an absurd and vague 10% "more intelligent" example (for whatever intelligent means). And yet I can guarantee that for all the wasteful inefficiency of a society using even such an absurdly high difference as a basis for assessing individuals, it would have three immediate effects: people consciously or otherwise immediately begin judging everyone they met according to their new stereotype (the human brain is always looking for confirmation of negative suspicions); people within the negatively portra

      --

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    7. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are right white males from usa are in average less smart than eastern european, chinese and indian, take a look at the top usa chess masters, all of them are foreigners, Onischuk, kamsky, Lenderman, akobian, nakamura, and the list goes on.

    8. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      In the face of hostile facts the religious response must actually be: "women are superior"

    9. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      Because the 'religion of the day' is that the genders are "equal", so it's pure blasphemy to point out the glaring facts.

      Yep. And not just gender equality, morons, wusses, bullies, etc. We are all no more equal than we all have the same abilities.

      Where it really craps out is when we try and apply mean averages to individuals. Take any woman at random and measure her abilities against a random man - the differences are probably no greater than comparing *any* two random people. Not that it's that simple either - culture plays a very big part in it. Ditto evolution. From an evolutionary point of view women "may" have greater adaptability and networking skills than men - and I note that what might have been beneficial 10K years ago might not be now. Before any of the little dicks get all touchy - it all balances out. If a man had an internal growth 1/4 the size of baby they'd die.

      Evolution - by the way - is vertical, not horizontal.

      I suspect we are not all thinking the same thing when we say "war" - I mean it as protracted violence to achieve territory involving more than two parties. Traditionally women have often raised (in some cultures) their children to war.... and if you live in the so-called Western world - I defy you go out on a Friday night to the less regulated areas and show me that women are less aggressive and violent. Check your newspapers, hang out at your local courts. 50 years ago is was fairly rare for a woman to be charged with assault in a public place. Not now. Control over their own fertility has changed a lot of things.

      The world is an interesting place.

    10. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      Similarly, it's not politically correct to talk about how race is a major indicator of intelligence... despite being absolutely proven, with economic and societal levels controlled for.

      Bullshit

      Evolution is vertical, not horizontal. And most definitely not defined by race or geography (just like stupidity).

      Bad statistics were invented for douchebag arseclowns like you. If you weren't so inferior you wouldn't need to constantly invent "proof" that you're not.

      Only time will tell - is your family expanding in size and success?

    11. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      gajillions

      Sigh

      t's exactly the same as Northern Europeans need to treat their skins with sun blockers to avoid skin cancer in situations where people of African descent can tolerate the effects of the sun without ill effects.

      Bullshit

      Let's try to find the cause of low intelligence. If it's racially related, then let's find a biochemical cure, if Africans, or any other genetic group, have low intelligence due to race, let's develop some medicine that will allow them to have normal intelligence.

      Go back to your fantasy lab and invent a "biochemical" cure for you own gullibility. Clearly you are too dumb to be allowed out of the trailer park

      You are full of shit

      Is there any part of my post you don't understand?

    12. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say that it is less what our brains are capable of, but more what our brain chemistry chooses to focus on. So pointing out that there are less women in the field of mathematics doesn't mean women aren't as capable at math. They just choose to focus elsewhere. And when they DO focus on math, they have the same distribution of talent as men.

    13. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      PC-ness also governs who gets a research grant and tenure. So it's not as simple as "just say it anyway."

    14. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by mangu · · Score: 1

      Is there any part of my post you don't understand?

      Yes, the part where you actually try to answer. It's very easy to say "You are full of shit", the difficult part is addressing the issues.

      I think your answer is very much an endorsement of the points I was raising. PC people don't try to reason the arguments, they always call "Bullshit" to everything that doesn't suit their own preconceived view of reality.

    15. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1
      Now don't be calling me PC. That's just uncalled for. ;-p

      We are not all equal in abilities.

      PC means some people have "reading impediments". Reality is some people have not evolved the capacity to read. I suspect they may expend the energy elsewhere - like adapting to a life of cleaning sewage (class consciousness). But those things have no relationship to skin colour or geographic location.

      Maybe you've got an ozone layer where you are - but we don't have much of one here. Black or white you slap the sunscreen on exposed skin or get burnt. Fact.

      Intelligence is a little like crop production (poor analogy I know - but it's late and I'm in a hurry)- if the soil isn't toxic (no genetic impediments), and the nutrients are there (diet, education) and the environment isn't hostile (do we beat up the smart kids, do we value footballers over smarts) then intelligence flourishes. As pointed out in my earlier posts - evolution is vertical - not horizontal - it affects the offspring of individuals - not races. If the disparity between rich and poor is great - then so will be the ratio of low intelligence to high intelligence. Family and environment is everything.

      Nootropic solutions are pure bullshit because they do not exist.

      When people tell you that you're full of shit it doesn't mean they are PC people - it could be just that you *are* full of shit. I call bullshit to people who say that "discriminating" is wrong - and I ask them to find their fucking car without discriminating - and get a dictionary and look up "bigot". Black is black, White is white. A bigot is someone who decides that one is "better" than the other - which is not good, or bad - it's just stupid. And I call stupid - bullshit. PC says "everyone" has a valid point of view. I say "what, even fuckwits who are wrong?

      (yawn). The purpose of patronizing views (like the ones you express) is that it makes you feel that you are better in some way. Which makes you a patronizing bigot who uses *bullshit* about black skin not requiring sun protection and "biochemical" cures for low intelligence to advance an argument - that *other* races are not as intelligent as theirs.

      Oh - I've read the book. You can guess what I think of it.

    16. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Sebastopol · · Score: 0

      First, you clearly don't understand the difference between gender and sex. The "genders" do deserve to be treated equally, the "sexes" are biologically not equal, and no sane person claims contrary to the latter. Second, educate yourself rather than hiding behind phoney cliches invented by impotent white conservative Christian men who are threatened by anything not like themselves.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_equality

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    17. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are drunk. Okay, it's Christmas. Go sleep it off before posting on Slashdot.

    18. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Jartan · · Score: 1

      It's non-PC because 99% of the time someone bringing it up just has an agenda for sexism/racism/whatever.

    19. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      Where did I say that the genders should not be treated equally? Did you forget to put on your reading glasses, or did you reply to the wrong post by mistake? I'm also not a Christian, so really you're just blathering on blindly and confusedly lashing without even a clear understanding what you're lashing out against.

    20. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      By the way, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary (which I take to be slightly more definitive than Sebastopol) disagrees with you:

      http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gender?show=0&t=1293411085

      "a : sex ...
      Examples of GENDER
              Please state your name, birth date, and gender."

      "gender (noun) 1 [count] : the state of being male or female : sex"

      So your attempt to prove me wrong by arguing a minor semantic point is also sadly completely and utterly wrong. 'Gender' is extremely widely used as basically synonymous with 'sex', and only sometimes used as referring to the psychological construct.

    21. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      A claim that many feminists do attempt to make. Our society is so awash with anti-male rhetoric that our 'benchmark' has drifted to the point where we don't notice the anti-male bias anymore.

    22. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are drunk. Okay, it's Christmas. Go sleep it off before posting on Slashdot.

      He/she might be drunk but at least they actually put up a reasoning.

      What's your excuse/motivation?

    23. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      If the environment within which you are working requires you to be intellectually disingenuous, then perhaps you should work in a different environment.

    24. Re:Gender differences - be happy! by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      For your discussion to happen, we need evidence.

      My point is it's hard to get any research done on certain subjects, because researchers are expected to come to certain conclusions.

      Telling researchers to change jobs isn't going to help the facts come out.

  22. And no mention about Magnus Carlsen ? by eulernet · · Score: 1

    And there is no mention about the chess prodigy Magnus Carlsen:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnus_Carlsen

    who was ranked first at the ELO Fide page at the age of 19 !

    Since chess competition between men is much tougher, it's really an amazing achievement (Judit Polgar is 49th: http://ratings.fide.com/top.phtml?list=men )

  23. The most important accomplishment? by Terje+Mathisen · · Score: 3, Informative

    Are you forgetting that 2010 was the year Magnus Carlsen became the youngest ever FIDE top-rated chess player in the world?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnus_Carlsen

    This did happen in January, so you could be forgiven for not remembering so far back. :-)

    Terje

    --
    "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching"
  24. Segregation by LainTouko · · Score: 1

    My theory would be segregation. The vast majority of chess-players are male, generally. But despite the lack of any obvious reason why men and women shouldn't compete on equal terms, any female chess players who come along get shoved into girl's and then women's tournaments, which means that they don't get to play so much against the vast majority of chess talent, and they're not encouraged to aspire to be better than the world's best players. And strong competition and high aspirations are two important factors in sporting success.

    A small talent pool in which to find champions can go quite far in explaining the lack of successful chess-playing women. Having to find rivals in that same small talent pool seems enough to explain the rest. Maybe, instead of generating "women's world chess champions" of no real credibility, the female chess world should ditch its attitude of inferiority, and look to its best player for inspiration.

  25. Goodbye, karma by pjt33 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow, the feminists you know are surprisingly mild. I'm more used to hearing that women are superior to men in every single way conceivable.

    1. Re:Goodbye, karma by LordNacho · · Score: 1

      They can't pee standing up. Unless they buy one of those weird tubes.

  26. Judit Polgar would have beaten Yifan... by Luxemburg · · Score: 1

    ...when Judit was 12, with just Judit with a blindfold, 10-0 in a 10 game match.

    Judit Polgar is the best femal chess player in history, by a long margin. Let's stop the propagation of this nonsensical news.

  27. Don't be willfully ignorant by bradley13 · · Score: 1

    Massive citation required for the correlation of race and IQ? Just enter "racial differences in IQ" into Google, and you will have more citations that you can deal with, on both sides of the equation. Start with the references available in Wikipedia. Follow that up with "The Bell Curve" - this book offends people precisely because it carefully documents the existence of such differences.

    The problem is not whether racial IQs are different. The problem is that we are not allowed to scientifically investigate this question. By PC dictate, races must have identical intelligence distributions, and no dissent from this view will be tolerated. Truth be damned, we don't want to offend anyone...

    Consider the continuing catastrophe that is Africa. If it should happen that part of the problem is a low average IQ for blacks, one might think it essential to find out why this difference exists. If the factors are primarily environmental, that sets the general approach to dealing with the situation. If the factors are primarily hereditary, then completely different solutions are required.

    Sticking our collective heads in the PC-sand, by prohibiting any discussion of the topic, is just stupid.

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
    1. Re:Don't be willfully ignorant by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2
      Lots of words, not one single link to a peer reviewed study providing a correlation between race and intelligence, controlled for economic, social, and educational factors. I've typed that phrase into a search engine before, and I've looked at the results, all of which cited a single study, which is the one that I mentioned in my post. I've not read The Bell Curve, but Wikipedia provides a quote from it:

      The debate about whether and how much genes and environment have to do with ethnic differences remains unresolved

      So, even that book does not contain a definitive statement about how race correlates for intelligence independently of social and educational factors. As I said, the only study that I've seen puts the peak of the bell curve 7 points apart for the two most distinct racial populations (not controlled for environmental factors), while a slightly more recent study showed a 13 point difference between peaks for rich and poor Americans of the same ethnic origins.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Don't be willfully ignorant by Devout_IPUite · · Score: 1

      PC dictates we can't examine personality and mental differences by race because a bunch of racists in the early 20th century published a bunch of white-supremicist drivel under the banner of science. I personally wonder how in particular generations of slavery affected the african-american population.

    3. Re:Don't be willfully ignorant by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

      Consider the continuing catastrophe that is Africa. If it should happen that part of the problem is a low average IQ for blacks, one might think it essential to find out why this difference exists. If the factors are primarily environmental, that sets the general approach to dealing with the situation. If the factors are primarily hereditary, then completely different solutions are required. Sticking our collective heads in the PC-sand, by prohibiting any discussion of the topic, is just stupid.

      Let me try and explain why so many applicants for the US military get rejected - 'cause I've read the rejection rate profiles by racial background and if you took those outcomes without looking at the education level of those that didn't apply for the military - your argument'd hold water.

      I run some sheep (really) - they appear pretty bloody stupid (they're merinos). Are merinos stupid sheep? Yes, and no.

      If I ensure they all have good nutrition will they all be of equal intelligence? No.

      If I keep breeding the least stupid ones will I get "smarter" sheep? No - two reasons - to work with them they have to be approachable (sheep stressed by humans don't yield as much as less stressed sheep) so I'm always unconsciously selecting the most domesticated sheep - while the smartest ones don't run with the flock - they just leap over the fence (easily) and do what they want. Eventually the escapees will suffer for their freedom - and there "smarter" genes will not flourish - but that because they've already been bred to need human intervention (need shearing, protection from insects). Go back to the wild ancestors of the merino and you will find the smarter sheep.

      Compare the sheep in my paddocks with the wild sheep and my sheep are not as smart. If, however I bred for sheep that didn't need shearing and dipping (breeds do exist) - then I would have the basis for smarter sheep.

      So my problems with a lot of these studies is that they fail to account for the factors that restrict the reproduction of the smartest - and the factors that favour the reproduction of the least smart, most compliant.

      I suspect the latter factor is also part of PC. Too dumb, lazy or whatever to earn top dollars and increase the chances of your offspring having offspring? Taxpayer to the rescue! (sigh)

      Africa is one of many countries that has had centuries of oppression through war and slavery - and who is first up against the wall? The biggest threat to the established order is. This is same the world over. Most of the world, at some time or other has been oppressed - the smarter either seized the chance to escape, got killed/imprisoned (didn't breed), or stayed and had their ability to reproduce reduced (usually) - unless they were particularly smart and acted dumb. (acting dumb is a way of dealing with an oppressor - when asked by the bigger, threatening bloke what you're doing "I dunno" is the safest response)

      In short, war, commerce, and legal systems influence gene selection. Gene selection is the basis of intelligence (impels not compels). Failure to account for these factors in intelligence profiling is the opposite of intelligent. To argue that whether someone gets to reproduce or not has no bearing on intelligence is just stupid.

  28. Judit Polgar was trained to be a genius by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From Wikipedia:

    She and her two older sisters, Grandmaster Susan and International Master Sofia, were part of an educational experiment carried out by their father László Polgár, in an attempt to prove that children could make exceptional achievements if trained in a specialist subject from a very early age.[3] "Geniuses are made, not born," was László's thesis. He and his wife Klara educated their three daughters at home, with chess as the specialist subject. From the beginning, Laszlo was against the idea that his daughters had to participate in female-only events. "Women are able to achieve results similar, in fields of intellectual activities, to that of men," he wrote. "Chess is a form of intellectual activity, so this applies to chess. Accordingly, we reject any kind of discrimination in this respect."[4] However, chess was not taught to the exclusion of everything else. Each of them has several diplomas and speaks four to eight languages. Their father also taught his three daughters the international language Esperanto. They received resistance from Hungarian authorities as home-schooling was not a "socialist" approach. They also received criticism at the time from some western commentators for depriving the sisters of a normal childhood. However, by most reports the girls appeared happy and well-adjusted. Currently, as of 2010, all three have earned good incomes from chess and are married with families of their own.

  29. IQ by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    What I've heard (and am too lazy to look up right now) is that although men and women have similar IQs on average, men have a greater percentage far below the line and a greater percentage far above the line.

    --
    I come here for the love
  30. Actually... no. by denzacar · · Score: 2

    Just like in the west, it is not "the goberment" that does the random picking. It is the parents.
    This article has a nice quote regarding that.

    "If my children don't get picked to carry on in gymnastics," Li says, "I'll move them to diving."

    Parents are the ones dead set at making their kid into the next [insert competitive activity here] prodigy.
    So they pack their kids to specialized training schools at the age when they are barely aware of the world around them.
    And yes, they don't put a gun to their heads - but that is purely because an adult doesn't really need a gun to make a 4-year-old do what he/she is told.

    And you don't need to produce optimal results (which is a ridiculous goal in itself - they are aiming for SUPERIOR results) - or do you really think that there are hundreds of gold medals to be won in gymnastics at every Olympic?
    As the gymnastics teacher in one of those videos says - that is the thick bottom end of the pyramid.
    Only the super-best get to go to the Olympics. But every kid whose parents THINK that they can afford to ship him/her to one of those schools (Note that the entire family wears their coats when at home. Heating is for the western capitalist pigs.), WILL get the chance to start the training at the age of 4.

    I just love that last part of the video, where you get to hear the little girl's mother talking about how she has "wished for a successful kid since she got married".
    And then how she speaks, while cluelessly smiling, about her 6-year-old daughter always complaining that she doesn't want to go the gymnastics school - yet she stands ready to go each morning, and when asked why she goes if she doesn't want to she replies "that if she doesn't go, she will have to run 30 laps as punishment".
    She often cries when alone in bed at night, but she says that her parents want her to go to the gymnast school - so she does.
    And in the evening, the girl studies English - so if all this doesn't pan out, she can at least be a doctor.

    It is always wonderful seeing parents live their unfulfilled dreams through their children.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  31. Maybe woman generally aren't as good at chess? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have no idea whether the average woman could be as good or better at chess than the average man and I don't really care one way or the other but I do care that such an obvious possibility (that women might not possess the skills required to be as good as men) is rarely mentioned or dismissed without serious consideration.

    It seems to me that bigots on both sides of the argument are pushing their own pet ideas to support their own prejudiced views.

    Anyone heard of Occam's razor?

  32. kasparov and women chess players by Demonoid-Penguin · · Score: 1

    The former World Champion Garry Kasparov wrote that, based upon her games, "if to 'play like a girl' meant anything in chess, it would mean relentless aggression."

    describing Judit Polgár.

    He also said:-

    "She has fantastic chess talent," said Kasparov. "but she is, after all a woman. It all comes down to the imperfections of the feminine psyche. No woman can sustain a prolonged battle."

    He also played he and cheated (caught on film), and when she beat him he walked out in a fit.

    Bobby Fisher refused to play her:-

    "No, they're Jewish."

    And for those with an interest in gender, intelligence and breeding....

    Judit Polgár (born July 23, 1976) is a Hungarian chess grandmaster. She is by far the strongest female chess player in history. In 1991, she achieved the title of Grandmaster (GM) at the age of 15 years and 4 months. She was, at that time, the youngest person ever to do so. Polgár is ranked number 49 in the world on the November 2010 FIDE rating list with an Elo rating of 2686, (was) the only woman on FIDE's Top 100 Players list, and has been ranked as high as eighth (in 2005)

    She and her two older sisters, Grandmaster Susan and International Master Sofia, were part of an educational experiment carried out by their father László Polgár, in an attempt to prove that children could make exceptional achievements if trained in a specialist subject from a very early age. "Geniuses are made, not born," was László's thesis. He and his wife Klara educated their three daughters at home, with chess as the specialist subject. From the beginning, Laszlo was against the idea that his daughters had to participate in female-only events. "Women are able to achieve results similar, in fields of intellectual activities, to that of men," he wrote. "Chess is a form of intellectual activity, so this applies to chess. Accordingly, we reject any kind of discrimination in this respect."

  33. Greater variance in male intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "No one really knows why the best female players are typically not as good at chess as the best men."

    Sure they do. It's been known for decades that, although average male intelligence and average female intelligence are very close to identical, the variance in male intelligence is larger than the variance in female intelligence. This means that men dominate the extremes of intelligence. Put simply, most of the world's geniuses and morons are men.
     

  34. Re:The obvious reason: by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    They have more wo not woh.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  35. It's the parents... by chrb · · Score: 2

    The question is why fewer women would choose to play chess then; you haven't really answered the question, just shifted it slightly.

    Personally I think women are just less interested in chess, which is probably genetic.

    If you've ever been to a children's chess club, you'll notice that the ratio is something like 9 boys to 1 girl. The driving force in a child's chess career is the parents - they are the ones who organise everything, who finance everything, who transport the children between home and club and national events. Competing in national events requires thousands of miles of weekend travel every year - a considerable investment of time for any family. At this age (pre-puberty), there is no particular reason to think that there should be any substantial genetic differences. For some cultural or personal reason, parents of girls seem less willing to push them towards playing chess, and do not have a chess career ambition for their daughters. You may be right in that there is a genetic component, but we will never know for sure, until the parents of girls act the same way as they do for the boys, and act in a focused way to drive their children's careers forward. I am sure that if we had the same number of parents pushing their young daughters as they push their young sons, then there would be many more successful female chess players.

    1. Re:It's the parents... by BeanThere · · Score: 1

      You may be right in that there is a genetic component, but we will never know for sure

      Actually, I think that as the science regarding our DNA improves, I suspect that we will probably someday know for sure. Possibly even within our lifetimes. Science will answer this question definitively, and real science doesn't care about our politically correct biases, it weasels out the facts even when we don't like the answer.

  36. In Utero by handy_vandal · · Score: 1

    Ultrasound machine plus home computer equals in utero chess training.

    Kids learn faster than adults -- a well-trained, well-programmed embryo should learn the rules quicker than anyone.

    It's mainly a problem of interface design. After that, throw enough processor power at the problem, and this baby will trounce Deep Blue from the womb!

    --
    -kgj
  37. Gender segregation in tournament chess by handy_vandal · · Score: 1

    "Any female chess players who come along get shoved into girl's and then women's tournaments."

    I did not know that. The thought saddens me.

    "Female chess world should ditch its attitude of inferiority, and look to its best player for inspiration."

    Amen to that.

    Furthermore, women and like-minded men should start shaming anyone who takes a "no girls allowed" attitude .

    --
    -kgj
  38. +Interesting by handy_vandal · · Score: 1

    Well articulated, and quite intesting. Thanks.

    --
    -kgj
  39. If 80% of chess players were women... by Brannon · · Score: 1

    ...then men would consider mastery in chess at the same level as mastery in knitting. We wouldn't care.

    Women are naturally superior at all sorts of things which we have defined away as trivial. For the most part, I suspect that most women don't care about mastery in chess.

  40. So... by The+Wild+Norseman · · Score: 1

    When is she slated to go to Battle School?

    --
    "A government is a body of people usually -- notably -- ungoverned." -Shepherd Book
  41. Baseball != athletics by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's just me but I always have trouble seeing baseball players as "athletes".

    Baseball is a sport, not an athletic event.

    --
    No sig today...
    1. Re:Baseball != athletics by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Its just you. Baseball is all about running fast, hitting hard, and throwing fast. It's pretty much entirely athletic.

      Unless you have some weird personal definition where sports != athletics when the two are actually synonyms. See the definition below, specifically def number 3.

      [ath-let-ik] Show IPA
      –adjective
      1.
      physically active and strong; good at athletics or sports: an athletic child.
      2.
      of, like, or befitting an athlete.
      3.
      of or pertaining to athletes; involving the use of physical skills or capabilities, as strength, agility, or stamina: athletic sports; athletic training.
      4.
      for athletics: an athletic field.
      5.
      Psychology . (of a physical type) having a sturdy build or well-proportioned body structure. Compare asthenic ( def. 2 ) , pyknic ( def. 1 ) .

  42. Separate competition for women and men? by karinqe · · Score: 1

    Why is there a separate competition for women? I kind of understand that in sports, but why in chess?

    1. Re:Separate competition for women and men? by Shados · · Score: 1

      If you think thats silly, they do that with videogames. There's a special division for women in Starcraft tournaments.

  43. no pics? by Nyder · · Score: 1
    --
    Be seeing you...