Conversations with Tyler - Garry Kasparov on AI, Chess, and the Future of Creativity
Episode Date: May 10, 2017The chess grandmaster, political activist, and author joins Tyler for a conversation on artificial intelligence, Russia, Putin, how education must change, favorite cities for chess, the most likely ch...allenger to Magnus Carlsen, Tolstoy v. Dostoevsky, the benefits of pressure for performance, and why we should speed up our search for new frontiers and challenges. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded April 29th, 2017 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Garry on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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I'm here with Gary Kasparov.
Gary, of course, is the world's greatest chess player ever,
but more importantly, I think of him as a man who has never, ever shied away from a
challenge. He is one of the least complacent people I know, truly brave and courageous. He has a new
book out. The title is Deep Thinking. Gary, of course, himself is an extremely deep thinker in
virtually all areas. The subtitle is where machine intelligence ends and human creativity
begins. Whereas in Gary's previous book, Well, Winter was coming. This time around, it's a little
more cheery and at least in some regards, well, finally, spring has arrived. Gary, thank you for coming
on the podcast.
Thanks for inviting me.
And you're right.
Yeah, and this book is more cheery than the previous one.
So I thought it would be a good idea to keep a balance.
And I think in both cases, I went against the dominant trend at the moment when the winter is coming, was written and published.
Many people here in this country or in the free world,
they had doubts about my strong statements about Russian dictator Vladimir Putin.
Now, regarding this book, Deep Thinking, when I was writing the book, many people tend to believe
Elon Musk, Stephen Hawking, and other pessimists who predicted a doomsday scenario when
artificial intelligence would inevitably.
take over a world. And this time I took the opposite side, optimistic side. And this book was an
attempt to write a real story of artificial intelligence and its connection to the game of chess.
Why the founding fathers of computer science like Alan Turing and Claude Shannon had such an
affection for the game of chess and why they believe that solving the game of chess, or more likely
making machines capable of beating strongest players, could help them to solve the problems
for artificial intelligence, and why, by the way, they were wrong.
Let me ask you some of my questions. We'll start with topics related to your book.
If we think of computer chess as a kind of project, along with AlphaGo, as somewhat of a referendum
on human intelligence, that is, for decades, even centuries, humans have been trying to solve
chess and go and play it better.
and understand how the games work.
And then artificial intelligence comes along computer chess,
and they teach us how far off we were.
So if you think of artificial intelligence
as teaching us something about humans,
what kind of mistakes we make,
how smart we are or how stupid we are,
how would you judge the results of these referenda?
I don't think the founding fathers of computer science
had the same affection to go,
or shoggy because they were not familiar or had very little knowledge of these games that
were played in other part of the world.
Now, chess was a game that for centuries had kind of an ultimate sign, a mark of unique
intelligence.
And it was quite natural for them to look at the game of chess as the milestone for
breaking up
this mystery of human intelligence.
Sure.
And
what we discovered in 1997
when Deep Blue
was successful in a match against
current world champion,
and I was world champion at that time,
that
chess could be crunched by brute force
once
hardware got fast enough,
databases got big enough, algorithms got smart enough.
But even while Deep Blue was victorious, it was anything but intelligent.
Of course, you can start arguing about the definition of intelligence, because by the definition of its output, the Grandmaster level chess, the Deep Blue was intelligent.
But at this incredible speed, at certain points, Diblu could reach...
phenomenal speed of, even today it's phenomenal, but 20 years ago it was mind-boggling of 200 million
positions per second. It offered us very little dreamt of insight into the mysteries of human
intelligence. So you think humans are smarter than we might have thought. No, it's just different
because it's any game, whether it's chess or we can move on with gore or shogi,
still offers us a very limited area of human intelligence
because at the end of the day, the way we're trying to understand
who is better in the respective game,
it will be a result, win or loss.
And machines have a decisive advantage
because they, you may call it, have a step,
steady hand.
Yes.
Humans are vulnerable because we cannot keep the same level of vigilance required to play
with the machines, even if we understand chess as well as machines do, even if we can
survive the brute force of calculation.
But at the end of the day, the pressure on a human player facing the machine is simply unbearable.
So when humans are playing chess, and here I mean professional chess players, what do you
think is the major human systematic bias during the game? Is that they're not patient enough or they
take too many chances? They don't take enough chances. What's the bias in us as human beings across
the board? I don't think humans at the highest level are playing machines anymore. So it's useless
because you know they're the outcome. Oh sure, but Caruana sits down against Nakamura. What biases do they
exhibit in their play? Psychological biases. No, but it's, I were talking about two humans? Two humans.
No, that's another story because if you have two humans, then you have two individuals
and most likely they know each other.
I played, I guess, 182 games in the World Championship matches and many more games,
hundreds of games against other top players in different competitions.
And I knew almost all my opponents.
I knew what to expect from them.
I knew what to expect from myself.
Human chess is a form of psychological world.
So it includes a psychological element because you should know how to play a game against a very specific opponent.
And sometimes, not very often, but sometimes you may look for certain moves that may not be the best purely from chess point of view.
But they could create a situation at chessboard that might push your opponent of balance.
Now, with machine, it's totally different.
And it's the humans are facing an opponent that is not vulnerable to any psychological pressure.
And moreover, an opponent that doesn't care about what's happened one move ago,
in any human game, you always have not necessarily blunders or mistakes, but inaccuracies.
Because if we are reaching winning position, complacency,
is hard to avoid.
So you think complacency is the main human bias you see in top chess games?
It's complacency if you're on a winning side,
but it could be also the desperation if you're on losing side.
One of the greatest problems against any machine
is how to deliver the final blow, to win the game.
Even if you're lucky and you get a very good position,
then again, you have to play with precision
that is not required in human chess.
So everything that you learn throughout your professional career,
it just suddenly is working against you.
And my experience, and I'm talking about best games played by top players,
tells me that inaccuracies are inevitable.
And any inaccuracy against the machine,
even if you made already 45 good moves and four great moves,
but the fifthest move that is simply inaccurate,
may deny your victory that you think you deserve by playing brilliantly.
You don't have to lose necessarily, but if your position is really good.
But machine, let me just emphasize,
playing against the machine requires precision and concentration
that I don't think it can be achieved by humans in a regular game of chess
or another game like Go or Shogi.
I think if we want to continue this experiment
or just to put it in an extreme form,
I would say that if we have Magnus Carlson,
the current world champion,
offered an opportunity to play against the computer,
say 10 games match,
on the conditions that he wins the match if he wins one game.
Yes.
Which means he can play all the games without thinking about losing the game by making a mistake.
Or just, you know, he can play without this terrible psychological pressure.
Maybe there's still a chance.
I would bet on the computer, though, would you?
No, but yes, to win only one game.
I know.
But to win a game against Ribca is very difficult.
If it would draw one game, I might bet on that.
No, draw I take, no.
If you're talking about drawing, then, you know, and Magnus plays white, for instance, let's take Magnus.
I think it's still 50-50 chance.
Magnus is pretty good.
So there's drawing with, no, I'm talking about winning.
No, drawing it, you'll make a few draws, that's for sure.
I have no doubt about it.
Now, winning, if you give him this big handicap, that he doesn't have to think about losing the games,
It's all about concentrating and looking for the best moves.
I think there's a chance.
I wouldn't bet my bottom dollar.
I still think it's below 50%.
But there's a chance.
There's a decent chance.
It's not slim to none that the best player may win.
But again, we're talking about handicap event.
So I think that's the matches I played with the Blue
and following matches that I played with
Deep Junior and Deep Ritz and the matches that Krammni played with Deep Ritz.
They just, they ended the story of human machine competition on equal terms.
But they closed this chapter of the search of the mysteries of human intelligence in the realm of chess.
Now, a lot of humans don't play chess.
but we're looking at a future where AI will make decisions about who gets a monetary loan,
who is diagnosed as being schizophrenic or bipolar, how cars drive on the road, increasingly is controlled by software.
The fact that the decisions of the software are not so transparent, and you see this also in computer chess,
how will ordinary human beings respond to the fact that more and more of their lives will be, quote, unquote, controlled by these non-transparent processes that are too smart for them to understand?
Because in your book, you have emotional conflict with the blue, right?
Exactly. Exactly. And I'm just telling you that it's inevitable. There's certain things that are happening and it's called progress.
This is the history of human civilization. I think the whole history is a process or a steady process of replacing all forms of labor by machines.
it started with machines replacing farm animals and then manual laborers.
And then it kept growing and growing and growing.
There was a time I mentioned in the book.
People didn't trust elevators without operators.
They thought it would be too dangerous.
It took a major strike.
And in the city of New York, that was equal major disaster.
if you had to climb to imposterate building with paralyzed elevators.
I understand that today people are concerned about self-driving cars.
Absolutely.
When do they swerve?
But now, let's imagine.
There was a time, I'm sure, people were really concerned.
They were scared, Steve, of autopilots.
Now, I think, you know, if you tell them that autopilots not work in the plane, they will not fly.
Because they understand that, again, in the big numbers, these decisions are still more qualitative.
And while I understand that also the fear of people who might be losing jobs and they could see that machines are threatening their traditional livelihood.
But at the same time, even these people whose jobs are on chopping block of automation,
they also depend on the new wave of technology to generate economic growth and to create sustainable new jobs.
This is a cycle.
And the only difference with what we have been seeing throughout human history is that now machines are coming after people with college degree, political influence, and Twitter accounts.
But say I'm at the self-checkout in the supermarket, if something doesn't work, I sometimes get fairly frustrated.
If I'm with a human cashier, maybe a new person, they're just training, and they don't do it properly.
I don't get frustrated at all.
I'm very tolerant because it's a human.
But the machine is much harder for me, just like it can be harder to play against deep blue than another human.
So are we doomed to a future where maybe things work more effectively, but we're just frustrated all the time
because there's not the human-to-human interaction to ease?
Again, that's hard for us to imagine, but we have been moving in this direction for a long time.
So the many things are just being done by machines already.
So that now machines will be more actively engaged in human interaction.
I can hardly imagine the supermarket with no humans at all.
There will be other humans who will be supervising machines.
But you could run a supermarket with no humans.
I think there are two of them in Japan.
Yeah, but I still think at the end of the day you need some humans,
again, different kind of job because you understand exactly what you said.
frustration and certain accidents, at the end of the day, you run supermarket to make profit.
You don't want your customers to run away if they're unhappy.
So you will meet maybe some human machine psychologist to make sure that the customer's
satisfaction will be up to a certain level.
But again, let's look at this historical process.
So machines that replace manual labor, they have allowed us to focus on developing our minds.
Now, more intelligent machines, more intelligent machines, they, I understand that they can,
they will take over more menial aspects of cognition and will elevate.
and we'll elevate our lives towards curiosity, creativity, beauty, joy.
You can continue this line.
We just have to understand that everything that we know how to do, machines will eventually
do better than us.
Let's say there's a mortgage lending algorithm and someone charges that it's discriminatory.
It lends too often, say, to white people and not enough to black people.
and there's some kind of trial or regulatory inquiry.
And the first thing everyone realizes is that no human can even understand the algorithm,
much less judge it.
What happens then legally?
Or is it simply the case that so many new chains have caused and effect
are so non-transparent to us?
We don't even know what to do.
My answer is I don't know.
But that's exactly why we should not worry about the future,
because the problem is the future if we know what's going to happen.
Yes.
That's always not good.
We all know that means that in the situation that you described,
we'll need new kind of lawyers, we'll need new kind of experts that will be able to solve
these problems.
There will be redistribution of jobs.
Many jobs today, like drone operators or 3D printer managers or social media managers,
they didn't exist 10 years ago, 50 years ago.
Right.
No doubt that in 10, 15 years, there will be many jobs, maybe the best pay jobs that don't exist today,
and we don't even know how these jobs will look like.
And I think that's natural.
All we have to do is just to realize that this process is inevitable,
and we have to prepare us mentally, but also to have some sort of safety cushions to help people
that will have great difficulty in adjusting.
People that come from manufacturing jobs,
manufacturing sector, people that are older
and don't have the same knowledge of machines,
and how to make sure that society will not be shaken badly
by another dramatic shift in technology.
But say more and more jobs are redistributed toward AI,
it can be very daunting to work with artificial intelligence.
So with Deep Blue, they had Joel Benjamin, who as you know is a very smart guy.
Is our educational system up to this shift, and won't it just mean the return to skilled labor
just keeps on rising and income distribution becomes less and less equal?
Or do you think somehow we will adapt?
Now we're talking.
It's like 38.
No, you mentioned the word education.
Yes.
That's what we should concentrate, because.
I think it's quite obvious today that the educational system that is still dominating this area of knowledge, it's inadequate.
When you look at the classroom, it hasn't changed since the University of Bologna in a certain 14th century.
So we still have the same school infrastructure or college infrastructure that,
that normally has, it's like a one-way street.
The information always comes from the teacher to the class
while this new generation is operating in two ways.
It's always interactive exchange.
And the biggest problem, and I've been talking about for quite a while,
that we're still teaching very specific knowledge in the schools.
And instead of teaching what we have to teach,
because this knowledge may be redundant 10 years from now.
We are preparing kids for the world that will change dramatic.
By the way, we already know it will look different.
So what's the point of trying to teach kids at age 10, 11, 12
without recognizing the fact that when they finish college,
when they will become adults looking for jobs,
the job market will be totally different.
And most don't even finish college, right?
Maybe they won't finish college,
but now we have to start thinking already,
not even thinking, but even implementing new techniques
to teach them how, to teach them certain basics,
certain skills that will be required in the world
that we'll know will be quite different.
And the new jobs will require definitely the knowledge of computers
and certain traditional skills that have been on demand for generations
simply will vanish.
But won't AI just adjust much more quickly?
So AI progress in chat succeeded your expectations,
the expectations of David Levy, many other people.
It seems our system of education at K-12,
the high school graduation rate has been almost stuck
since the late 1960s, college graduation rate, you know, maybe is approaching 40%.
It could take 30, 40 years to turn that around, even if we started doing everything right now.
So, in a sense, some people still left in the dust by these differential rates of change.
I mean, should we be so optimistic?
Yes and no.
We tend to forget that every dramatic change in human history,
caused also major problems.
Whether we like it or not,
but the most dramatic technological advance
happened at a time of war,
where people thought only about winning
and having the best,
and they didn't think about sacrifices
or about comfort.
I hope we can avoid
repetition of this,
of this science.
But naturally, we can expect substantial problems for many people who will have difficulty of adjusting to new realities.
So what we can do, just let's be objective, let's talk about it, and let's not terrorize them by the images of the Hollywood movies like the Terminator or the Matrix.
It's a challenge that is ahead of us, but it's not the end of the world.
There will be downsides, but there will be upsides.
And let's see how we can manage our move into the future,
because what is the alternative?
We don't get to choose when and where technological progress stops.
it's happening. So what I believe is the right approach is to understand that while machines
can do eventually better everything that we know how to do, but there's still so many new things
that only we can reveal. I'm always calling for us looking for new frontiers. There's no need
to slow down. We just have to speed up. And there's so many new challenges. It's up in the space,
down in the oceans. So many things that we're not doing now because they're too risky. And we like
our comfortable life. Now, I guess artificial intelligence, though I'm not, I'm not as optimistic
about the development. I don't think it's going to happen overnight. It's happening, but it's not
It's not a speed that is threatening us as predicted by the doomsayers.
But that will give us a push towards more risky adventures and forcing us to take the tasks
that now we are rejecting because they are offering question of returns with obvious risks.
You've been a pioneer in what's sometimes called advanced chess, freestyle chess or
centaur chess, where you pair a human being with a computer or a set of programs.
Today, 2017, do you still think it's the case that a human paired with a set of programs
is better than playing against just the single strongest computer program in chess?
Oh, there's no doubt about it.
But the human will make some mistakes, so the human will ask stockfish, comadou,
Ribca, what's the best move, collate the different outputs, make some kind of judgment,
explore some lines more deeply, put that at it.
against Ribka Cluster. Is Ripka Cluster really going to lose many games? I think so. Again,
it depends on the qualification of the operator. Sure, but the best operator in the world,
whoever that may be. Maybe yourself, maybe Anson Williams. I'm not, by the way, I exclude myself
from this category because I'm not a very good operator. I'm a very good chess player. But a great
operator does not have to be necessarily a very strong player. What makes for a great operator?
Someone who can work out sort of the most effective combination bringing together human and machine skills.
I reached formulation that a weak human player plus machine plus a better process is superior not only to a very powerful machine,
but most remarkably to a strong human player plus machine plus an inferior process.
At the end of the day, it's about interface.
Creating an interface that will help us to coach machine towards more useful intelligence
will be the right step forward.
And I'm a great believer that if we put together a good operator,
still, it's a decent chess player, not necessarily a very strong chess player,
running two, three machines and finding the best way to get this knowledge, to translate this
knowledge into the quality moves. Against Ripke Cluster, I would probably bet on a human
plus machine. A few questions about another one of your interests, Russia, formerly the Soviet Union.
If we look back on centuries of Russian history, do you think there's something in Russian
geography or demographics or geopolitics? What has it been that has led to such unfree outcomes
fairly systematically? Where do you find the roots of tyranny in the history of Russia?
Is it like a mix of the size of the country? Its openness to invasion, its vulnerability,
something about being next to dynamic Europe, on the other side, China, or what is it?
Look, it's a long, if not say, endless theoretical debate based on our interpretation of certain historical events.
I'm not convinced with this arguments about some nations being predetermined in their development
and alien to the concept of democracy and the rule of law.
And it's the reason I'm quite comfortable with this denial
that we can move from theory to practice.
And while we can talk about history and certain influence
of historical events to modernity,
But we can look at the places like Korea, Korean Peninsula.
The same nation, not even cousins with brothers and sisters, divided in 1950.
So that's by historical standards yesterday.
And we could see the difference.
So one country is the demonstration of the worst oral nightmare.
It's a gulag run by a paranoid dictator, the family of dictators, three generations.
And on the other side, the very same nation built one of the most sophisticated market economies
and a very resilient democracy.
Democracy that people in Europe can envy.
Just recently, they had a president impeached and tried.
And the CEO of the biggest corporation also.
being charged with crimes.
The two most important people in the country, right?
Exactly.
So that's the same nation.
And then obviously we can talk about two Germans,
but I would rather look now to China and Taiwan.
Again, the same people.
And we could see the difference.
Obviously, China is growing,
but comparing to dynamism
and political stability of Taiwan,
and Taiwan is just, it's a small rocky island
with 20 plus million people versus one point,
whatever, billion Chinese, continental China.
And we could see that Taiwan is far more advanced,
more dynamic, and the separation happened at the same time.
Now, we could see that Taiwan,
can even look, you just mentioned it's Asia and Russia, Asia and Europe. We can even look at
former Soviet Union and try to analyze from our knowledge of 2017 what's happened after
collapse of the Soviet Union and why certain some nations that are close to each other
now move in opposite directions. Let's look at Russia and Ukraine. And let's look at Russia and Ukraine.
look not at the whole Ukraine, but just at Eastern Ukraine.
Eastern Ukraine is populated by mostly by ethnic Russians.
In the former Soviet Union, the borders between republics, they were very nominal.
So people could move around.
It was not a big deal.
Even after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the official state border between Russia and Ukraine
was respected, but people,
people still could move around and they didn't need special visas. So when we look at ethnic
Russians, born and raised in Kursk and Belgrade on the Russian side, and across the border,
say in Kharkov and Nepropetrovsk, on the Ukrainian side, there were people that could be
hardly separated anything. They read the same newspaper Pravda, watched the same television,
spoke the very same language, not even accents.
But somehow in 2014, after Putin's annexation of Crimea
and invasion of eastern Ukraine, we saw a huge difference.
Most of ethnic Russians in Ukraine signed for Ukrainian army,
fighting against Putin's invasion,
against the same Russians that came from other side.
Again, it could be a long.
debate, but I would say that one of the main reasons is that Ukraine experienced in 1994
a gradual transition of power from one president to another after sitting president,
Leonard Kraftchuk, lost elections and walked away. So Ukrainians somehow got an idea that
power is not sacred and the government can come and go and they can remove it by voting. And
even despite the fact that Ukraine never experienced high living standards at Russia,
people realize that keeping this freedom, keeping this ability to influence their
bureaucrats and government through peaceful process of voting and, and if necessary, striking,
far more effective than Russia's quote-called stability were the same.
leader could be in charge of the country with his corrupt clique for a long, long time.
How vulnerable is Putin right now, and to the extent he is, is there a path toward democracy
at the end of that process?
I don't know where there's a path to democracy.
So what I know is that it's the regimes like Putin's, they're most aggressive and most
dangerous because it's not even Soviet Union or modern China where you had, as in the USSR,
we have today as in China, a Politburo,
a central committee of the Communist Party.
So a group of people, very powerful people,
calling all the shots.
Putin's Russia is a one-man dictatorship.
And dictator doesn't care about the future of the country
or about transition of power.
There's nothing of interest for him if he's gone.
Because normally it's not a retirement.
He loses power, he loses everything,
including very often he's.
own life. So he will be desperate in protecting this power and throwing all resources in his
disposal to stay on the top. So that's why he is less sensitive for new wars and new very aggressive
moves, international moves, because his power is not limited. Every group of people, even the worst of people,
the mafia families,
they always come to a more balanced decisions
because there's always a search for some kind of compromise.
As in Iran, yes.
Exactly.
They have to look for compromise
because they know that they're all part of the same system.
And if the system goes down,
they all could lose everything.
Putin doesn't have to listen to it.
Okay, he may listen,
but he doesn't have to listen to this advice.
and his powers are limited by other elite groups.
All he has to do, and he proved to be a very capable dictator,
to make sure that these groups are fighting each other.
And he could be kind of a judge on top of that.
I also call it a spine of the system,
which means that if he goes down,
you don't expect just a simple transition of power,
of power. Will it be a democracy? The answer is no. It's not going to be democratic next day,
but I'm strongly resisting the idea, popular idea in Russia and now in the free world as well,
that Putin's collapse could lead to something even worse. They say open fascist dictatorship,
as if today in Russia we don't have a fascist dictatorship.
No one or no other group that will replace Putin in power will have the same ability to cause damage inside the country and outside of the country.
And most likely these groups will try to communicate with the West, to find some kind of an understanding and to reduce the tension.
So while I don't expect an immediate democratic reconstruction in Russia after Putin's collapse,
I think that Putin's fall, Putin's demise, will serve Russia well as well, and also will help to reduce the pressure with our neighbors.
What if the provisional government of Kerenzky had made peace with the Germans in World War I before Lenin reenters the country?
Could you imagine a path for Russia where today would be more or less like a normal European country?
I think that if we try to make some projections into the future, you can hardly imagine Russia
surviving as a state in its current borders, though I'm not sure it's feasible at all,
with all the pressure from China and radical Islam, from East and from the South. But for Russia to find
its spot in the family of civilized nations in 20th century, it has no other choice but to work
with Europe and the United States. And also, also,
Also, going back to this Russian-Ukrainian conflict and now open war in eastern Ukraine, we can revisit early days of Russian history, going back nearly a thousand years.
And to remind people that there was another Russia.
Actually, the cradle of Russian civilization was Kiev's Russia.
and the trade republics in the northwest of Russia, like Novgorodomskov,
that those entities were fully integrated in the European political and trade space.
And maybe what is happening now in Ukraine and what will happen eventually with Russia,
it will be the final showdown between Kiev's Russia and the pro-European Russia
and the dominant tradition that was inherited by Moscow from the Golden Horde and Byzantine Empire,
and Russia will reinvent itself and will go back to its original roots.
Now, we have a segment in all of these podcasts called Underrated or Overrated,
and I name something and you give me your sense of how important it is to you
or if it's underrated or overrated.
And I'll start with the Bulgakov novel, Master and Margarita,
overrated or underrated?
It's hard to say because it was my favorite book.
It's still my favorite book.
Then it's underrated, right?
Yeah, okay.
Why is the novel important to you?
It's hard to explain for people who did not grow up in the Soviet Union
because there are so many unique aspects
that were close to the hearts of people who experience communism
and the life under these recording laws.
but it's a unique combination of reasoning history
and going back to the days of Jesus
and telling us in a very regional form
the classical biblical story
and projecting it to the life in Moscow in the 30s
and for those of us read it in the 7080s
we still could actually feel that it was
because it was about human nature
It was just the
it reminded us that human nature doesn't change.
With all the progress,
people still have the same vulnerabilities,
the same weaknesses,
the same temptations.
And this connection of times
from the ancient days
to modern days,
for me it still stands.
What from American fiction
has almost the same power for you?
Faulkner, Melville, Mark Twain.
Oh.
You've become an American in some ways.
Talk about the nature, human nature,
all kingsmen.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Political power corruption.
Yeah.
Robert Pennel War.
Yeah.
So that's the...
Uh...
Iads of March.
Mm-hmm.
Yes.
Thornda Wilder.
Yeah.
Again, that's this...
I'm always looking for very...
Yeah, the books that are just, you know,
they are about something else,
about days that were this in distant past.
But again, there's something that is so close
because we're humans and certain images from these books
we could see in today's political arena.
The films of Andrei Tarkovsky, overrated or underrated.
Stalker, yes.
It's a mixture.
It's a mixture.
This is, that's the, it's, and I also don't like when it's a films.
So it's the
Overall
I'm not the biggest fan
So I picked up one or two movies
They were just, but as I mentioned, Stalker
But otherwise, I'm not
I'm not the greatest fan
The Chess opening, the King's Gambit, 2F4,
underrated or overrated?
It's a great piece of history
But it has no relevance today
So that's why, again, it doesn't pass my test of connecting the past and the present and the future.
There's certain things that stay in the past because there were great bombings in the game of chess.
These gambits help to create beautiful, beautiful games that we can still enjoy.
But Sparsky beat Fisher with it once.
That was a long time ago.
You don't think that could happen?
Having total loss position after Move 15.
With databases, you think no way ever again.
No, but it's just, it's the, it's this.
I looked at these openings and I just came to the conclusion that they just simply don't stand
more than a technique of defense and counterattack.
It's just, they're not feasible.
If you are looking for a good game, professional game, they're not feasible.
By the way, I was the one who reinvented.
and brought back the Scotch, the Evans Gambit.
But I just have to realize that, okay, I don't play anymore,
but the way the chess has developed made most of this openings,
not all of them, but mainly gambits,
simply not feasible weapons at the top level.
If you took a top 10 player from the 70s,
someone like Timon or Ulf Anderson, a very good player.
Are you sure Timon is top player of the 70s?
No, top 10 player at times.
I don't think he was top 10.
In the 70s?
Okay, it's just he was getting close.
Someone who was in the candidate's matches, but never champion.
And you give them a 2017 openings database that they can use and no one else ever has access to.
How much stronger a player do they become?
It could be quite a significant progress.
100 rating points, 200 rating points.
I don't know, but it will definitely add probably 100 rating points.
So it's, it's, the reason I'm thinking about your question, and I have some difficulty answering
this question, is that for how long will it stay, you know, secret?
Because people will start, of course.
It's, it's the moment people see new ideas, they will, they will start moving into this
territory.
So you can hardly imagine that you can sit on this database for too long and others, others just
falling victims of your of your uh these deep knowledge uh but it will it will be quite a significant
improvement look in the match if you're talking about the database given to to to a world championship
uh um one of the participants of the match say courtshire carpov right that could that could be it would
decide the match that could be the size of factor yes Tolstoy overrated or underrated do you
have the
you can answer
whoever you want.
Again,
very uneven.
So there's certain
certain
novels
are just,
you know,
the short fiction,
right,
Haji Marad
is phenomenal.
There are many of them
phenomenal.
The problem was that
sometimes there's so much
philosophy like
in a war on peace.
That is just,
I think it's
outdated.
Outdated.
Like the King's Gambit.
I would,
so,
Dostoevsky
underrated. Because it's all
about human nature. That doesn't matter
whether you live in Russia
in the
second quarter of
the
the third quarter of
the 19th century or
in the first quarter of the
21st century. It's the
human emotions, the human
temptations, the human
reactions, they are still
very much the same.
Back to chess. Now, we both know Ken Rogoff, highly successful as an economist and a very good chess player.
If we take most top chess players at the very top and somehow they could not have played chess,
in other endeavors, how successful do you think they would have been?
No idea. No idea. No idea. But they're smart, right?
How specialized his talent? But you talk to the very general audience. When you say a very good chess player,
you have to explain. Top five. No, no, but Ken Rogoff. That, I mean,
Not top five.
No, no, no, no, but he was a very strong grandmother.
Yes.
This is the man who played professional chess.
Because the moment you say very good chess player, some people think, oh, maybe a good club player.
Very good by your standards, right?
No, no, he was a very good.
He was very good by any standards, so that's there.
And that makes me unique, so whether it was top 100 or not, but somewhere there in the world at his peak in mid-seventies.
I don't think that the aptitude of playing chess is anything but absolutely.
for playing chess. So there's no universal rule. Some people could move to other areas. I was
I was very, very lucky that I could, you know, I grew up with my mother who helped me to
sort of get education outside of chess and I always had various interests and looked for
life in entirety. And that's why after I started, I started, I started.
playing professionally in 2005, then already was a help of my wife, so I could move from chess
to other areas. And now I are a very full life without playing, without playing chess professionally.
But that's, again, that's not the rule. That's not happening with other players.
Though some of them, I'm sure, could do extremely well. By the way, some of them were very good
business people. Some of them made good investments. If you look at some of the British grandmasters
or other players in Europe.
No rule, but I think that the chess helps to some of them
to find a right approach to their new endeavor.
It may not be specific.
For instance, I'm more of humanitarian,
so I prefer history, literature.
I guess I'm a good speaker.
but I'm not as good in number crunching.
So it's very important to understand what you're good at.
That's what just helps you.
So to recognize what is your strengths
and also to be very open about your own weaknesses.
Perhaps you may recall your 1999 game against Opalov, right?
So a key moment in that game, you play Rook Takes D4.
Now, when you played Rook Takes D4 and made that sacrifice,
did you see at the time the later brilliant movement
moves coming up, your C3, your Bishop F1, your Rook D7, or did you just feel there's going to be
something that comes up? How much was it one or the other?
Not sure exactly at what point I saw the final combination, but first of all, after playing
Rook-Tay-Z4, I mean, I knew I was, you know, if he took, if he would have taken the Rook,
which was a mistake. Right. He should have played K-B-6.
Exactly. But he got a very good position. But I knew that it was already good for me,
though I was not sure about the outcome
immediately.
But within move or two,
actually, I saw the whole line.
And it's the,
I was quite lucky,
but at the same time,
you know, it prevented me from finding
the forced win in the middle of the combination.
Because at one point,
I made a second rate move.
Yes.
Just because I already saw the whole line.
And it was so aesthetically pleasing.
It was so easily.
And I didn't just,
and I just looked for,
obvious moves for black.
By the way,
both men and Trapalov missed a much better defense for black
that could prevent it,
this combination.
Though, of course, the end game...
You mean 30, Rukh, T.E8?
Yes, yes.
The black called with that?
Yeah, you just, yeah.
I think the end game is still...
It's much better for White,
though it's not winning.
So the move pointed by Cavalek, Rook A7 immediately.
So it would be winning by force.
So it would be a mate,
a mating net.
that black couldn't from where black king couldn't escape
but because I saw this it's all way up to the Rook D7
so I just I just and you look at the time I spent
I played almost almost blitz because I was so so
anxious to to reach the position and to demonstrate how far I could see
and also I was amazed by the by the beauty of this of this geometry
so I didn't prepare you for this question
You simply remember, correct?
The game against Topalov.
I didn't come to you before this session and tell you to go back and look at the game.
You simply remember.
I have to confess that, you know, I don't remember the exact number of the moves.
I can I can reconstruct the game.
Of course, I can reconstruct the game.
But I'm not, when I said Rook H8, I was actually to figure out.
That's when he played Queen C4.
Of course, exactly.
Then it would end up with the end game when I would be changed down.
but I had rook and bishop and and several pawns for his two rooks.
And if I remember correctly, it's probably it's winning, but it's not forced.
Would a top chess engine have played Rook takes D4 today?
I didn't check.
It depends on the relation of King B6 because they will see immediately,
even without calculating the whole combination,
They will see immediately that White could force a draw.
By the way, that's what Topalov thought, that I wanted to make a draw.
White could force a draw while after King B6, every engine shows immediately that black is better.
I mean, slightly better, but the evaluation is clearly in black's favor, so that's why they wouldn't take the rook.
Now, I don't remember whether a rook takes the...
I think at that time, White had no choice but to take on D4 because otherwise, you know, the whole position...
Then black is much more space, yeah.
Exactly, exactly.
Now, given this, does this mean even very, very good chess engines?
We'll never play games as beautiful as human beings, because you were so excited by this combination.
In some ways, it may have led you down inexact paths, but it nonetheless led you down this path,
and we got the beautiful game that we did.
But now, now you moved back to this chess computers, and there's certain things that people should realize,
because it's, I hate, you know, talking about these things.
Hussein Ryshe is using a bird language
because you're asking me questions
and I'm not sure that 99% of our listeners
they understand exactly what we're talking about.
Now, there's one thing that for people to understand
is that chess is you may call
mathematically infinite game.
So the number of legal moves is
it's more than a number of atoms in the solar system.
So machines cannot solve the game.
You cannot expect machine to play E2E4 at Move 1
and announcing made in 16,455 moves.
But machines could work the game of chess from the end.
So now we know that machines solved, mathematically solved.
All positions was four pieces, like King and Queen versus King and Rook.
All positions was five pieces.
All positions were six pieces.
And now seven pieces.
Seven pieces, it's on the way.
I'm not sure it's all solved, but it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, uh, we're talking about, um,
hundred terabytes.
Yeah.
Now, obviously eight pieces will be already just insane number and, and, and the game of chess is
ultimate endgame with 32 pieces.
So that's why it's, maybe machines will get to eight or nine moves, but that's what we'll
prove with the end, even for the, even for the,
immense computing power that you can expect in next five, ten,
20 years.
Will AI write beautiful music?
Or is there something about...
But I want to finish this because what we discovered in this process.
I mean, I wouldn't overweight our listeners with all these details.
I don't want just to throw on them this the massive information.
It's amazing what people will enjoy.
I'd be surprised.
But in some of these positions,
like there are certain seven pieces positions.
Yes.
When the win, and we're talking about the forced win,
can be reached within 500 moves.
Yes.
Now, 500 moves.
I remember I looked at some of the positions,
even at six pieces positions.
It's not intelligible.
No, no, no.
There's no, there's no, there's no, it's no, it's no, it's no,
piece is moving around.
I saw the position with king, two rooks, a knight on one side,
and king, two rooks and on other side.
And it said, mate in 490 moves.
First mate.
Now, I can tell you that even being a very decent player,
for the first 400 moves,
I could hardly understand why these pieces moved around.
They're like a dance.
It's endless dance around the board.
You don't see any pattern.
Trust me, no pattern, because they move from one side to another, and at certain points I saw,
oh, but White's position even deteriorated. It was better 50 moves before.
Now, the question is, and this is a big question, so if there are certain positions in these end games,
like seven pieces end games, that take by the best play of both sides, 500 moves to win the game,
what does it tell us about the quality of the game that we play, which is an average 50 moves?
It means you're clueless in the entire universe.
Exactly.
So it's an interesting philosophical question, and I have to confess, I don't know the answer.
Imagine how bad our politics would look.
Now that brings us to another point.
So maybe with machines we can actually move our knowledge much further.
And we can understand how to play decent games at much greater lengths.
Now, going back to computer chess, and I don't know how much time you spend looking at
the computer matches.
Quite a bit.
Quite a bit.
Now, I think you can confirm my observations that there's something strange in these games.
First of all, they're longer, of course.
They're much longer because machines don't make the same mistake, so they could play 70, 80 moves,
100 moves.
So 70, 80 moves is a normal length.
Still, by the way, it's still 70-80 moves.
It's still not fine.
It's way, way below what we expect from perfect chess.
Yes.
That's the, that machines are not perfect.
But most of these games are decided by one of the machines,
suddenly, can I call it losing patience?
Because you have a position that is roughly even,
it's maneuvers and they go around, the pieces of all,
from one side to another.
And then suddenly one machine makes it,
you may call human mistake.
Suddenly, it loses patience and it tries to break up
without good reason behind it.
My driverless car will do this someday.
But that also tells us that the machines,
that's interesting observation from also my experience,
that machines also have, you may call psychology,
the pattern in decision making.
And if you understand this pattern,
so we can make certain predictions.
So it's not all predetermined.
There's so many things that can go one way or another.
And that means that we will not be run by these mystical AI.
It's not perfect.
It's far from perfect.
There's so many areas it doesn't know how to cover.
Even setting aside a simple question
whether the brains can function effectively separately from the body.
So what does it mean that you have brains that are not part of the moving, of our moving body?
So can you separate it and still have the same effect?
My answer is, I don't know.
And that's what I believe is good.
Because that tells us that there's so much to learn in this process.
And for those who are predicting that AI is just around the corner and is going to wipe us out,
they don't know what they're talking about.
So it's more like a future of inscrutability and periodic surprises.
Yeah, but we also know that the doom saying has been always a very popular pastime when it comes to technology.
It's because it's easy.
You know, it's us against them, the race against the machines, the war against the machines.
You can sell it.
And I think it's important that people will stop looking at this either from utopian point of view.
Oh, we'll just, you know, get together, we'll fly to Alfa Santavara with machines.
they will serve us in this endless spaceflight,
or to the contrary, it's a sky net that is going to kill all of us.
It's a process, it's a process, and we should be objective.
This is not too optimistic, not dark pessimism,
but something that is more human, which is, let's get objective,
let's assess our chances, and let's realize this is a process of developing further human civilization.
and compared to the fears that people had about machines in 90s and 20th century,
why are not pioneers?
Do we do our best thinking under pressure?
Yes, we do much better.
I'm also best, but we definitely perform much, much better.
Some people collapse, but as a...
Ironian.
No, no, no, no.
As a humanity, as a humanity, of course we operate much more effective under pressure.
Look at wars.
A lot of mistakes, though, are made in wars.
Exactly, but this is mistakes always made.
But we're talking about the performance.
That's why we can look at the productivity.
Look at what people can do by inventing new things.
So the moment they're under pressure, you can expect that part of the group will perform way above expectations.
Last question.
What has been your favorite city to play chess in and why?
now it's simple because I don't play chess anywhere else but in St. Louis, Missouri.
But looking back, is it Moscow? Is it Linares? Is it some city?
I played more chess in Linares than anywhere else in the world, I guess.
And you've done very well there.
I did well. Now, in terms of perfect results, I would say Paris.
I played a few events, but most remarkably.
five rapid chess tournaments.
And the city never distracts you.
And I won four of them.
And I was in the final in all five.
So that's the, in terms of, again, rating my performance,
I don't think any city will come close to Paris.
And the city of Paris never distracts you when you're there.
If it's, you're there to play chess, you play chess.
No, well, Paris is always Paris.
But again, the results were perfect, nearly perfect.
So, and I'm not thinking.
about other places now but I don't think that's...
Is there a home disadvantage? So Anand playing in Chennai, his whole entourage is there,
he's a big hero in India, his family is around, he has to juggle competing demands, is it better?
But he lost to Magnus on Sochi as well.
Sure. So that's the...
So no home court disadvantage in chess?
It could be advantage, could be disadvantage, because it's a pressure. You play at home.
Anyway, I never played at home
because my home was
Except, okay, in 1980 I played in Baku
It was a tournament when I made my
second GM Grandmaster's norm
But that was not such a big challenge
Of course, people wanted me to win
But I was much strong in the rest of the field
It was all about me competing with Beliaski for the first prize
Everyone knew I would be a grandmaster there
Big matches
When I played Moscow
or with Karpov or just other events,
it was not considered to be home.
So it's the,
though I was not very successful in Moscow
when you look at overall performance,
if you play at home,
and just think about Anand and Magnus,
or you are guessed,
so it's a pressure on both players.
It's just extra pressure,
and it depends who can handle it better.
But since Magnus beat Anand,
in Chennai and in Sochi next year, I don't think that the
factor of the home factor or guest factor play the major role. Oh and one
final question I forgot. Who is the most likely challenger to Magnus Carlson
this next time around? Considering the the logic of the World Championship history,
Magnus should face opposition from a younger player or the same age. So I would
say there are three players that I guess could challenge him.
Maxim Vacheli Graf, I would rate him as a least probable,
minus three, second Karwana, and the most likely Wesley saw.
The reason I put Wesley ahead of two others is that he has a phenomenal concentration,
absolutely phenomenal, and it's very important.
These days, concentration trumps everything.
I would put it on top of other things, though he's a very, very good player.
And I think that he might be, Magnet's 3, he might be the most dangerous for Magnus.
Because he has nothing left, nothing to lose he feels?
He's early...
No, it's just because his concentration could overboard Magnus.
Magnus concentration was all his strengths.
He was always very concentrated.
He could mobilize all his resources for the game.
Now, we saw Magnus could feel, again, it's bi-educated guess,
so hasn't even qualified for the candidates.
It still has to win it.
But the vestless saw Magnus could have some serious problems
in reading his opponent and also just messing up.
his energy, so could reflect.
Though I think it's match with Karana could be also uncertain.
And if Veschelle Graf makes some improvements, more psychological improvements, he could
be also dangerous.
It's the same age.
Karuana is younger, so is even younger than Karwana.
So I would bet on these three as one of the Magnus Challenger, ranking them in the following
Gorso, Caruana, and VIL.
Gary, thank you for the chat.
It's been a pleasure.
Thank you.
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