How chess and mess define the meaning of life

Stephen Poole previews cultural studies titles in 2007
Saturday December 30, 2006

The Guardian


Chess genius Garry Kasparov, whom no one would dare to call a “demented control freak” to his face, retired from competitive play in 2005, but has hardly been idle since, founding the Russian political party United Civil Front and continuing to write his history of chess, titled with no false modesty My Great Predecessors.

Now, somewhat like a hirsute, modern Sun Tzu, he offers his general philosophy of strategy, How Life Imitates Chess (Heinemann, March). As he promised in a Wall Street Journal article last year, the book “examines the unique formulae people use in thinking and problem-solving. For example, the way hope and doubt affect how we process information, or the way we perform in a crisis.

I hope it will also serve as a guide to improving these processes.” Can the ability to calculate a 20-move forced tactical sequence in chess help you navigate the shark-infested waters of office politics? We shall see.

Here is the full article.
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