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If Kasporav doesn't care about science, he could have at least used the insights he pulled from chess, applied them to one sepcific example in his life, and then told us what the specific results were (with data). Dejando de lado los aspectos más ambiciosos, o más de autoayuda del libro de Kasparov, también tiene pasajes de genuino interés, que son aquellos que le dedica sin más al juego, a su historia, y a las rivalidades que inspiró. It wasn't until he found himself 4-0 down that he realised his straightforward attacking strategy wasn't appropriate. Fantasy must be backed up by sober evaluation and calculation or you spend your life making beautiful blunders.
Puede un conocimiento adquirido de esta manera transferirse a otras personas en forma instantánea, con nada más que un libro? Opening move (with due apologies to the great mind): The title should have been the other way round, how chess imitates life, for chess is a part of life. But he does attempt to give his passable attempt at talking willy-nilly about his exploits in chess and how they may or may not apply to life, in general terms. One of the most highly regarded strategists of our time teaches us how the tools that made him a world chess champion can make us more successful in business and in life. What we really want is science that backs up these fairy-tale stories of making gold out of new and exciting things.
Si antes de leerlo no lo admiraba a Kasparov, lo terminará admirando; y si ya lo admiraba, sólo lo confirmará. But without the knowledge and experience of life and specific details and data about Kasporav trying new things in life, this book has no gold nuggets for you to find. This can also be seen as a cursory glance on the world of chess players, their schools, their styles, and their flawed personnalities and their drives too. el factor tiránico, porque es el tiempo invertido en el aprendizaje de patrones, de recurrencias, de secretos, el que fija las lecciones aprendidas y las hace útiles. Life is too vast and deep and, the title of the book may not justify all that, except, may be the commercial angle.
Garry Kasparov es considerado el mejor jugador de la historia, y no tiene ningún prurito en autodefinirse así.In How Life Imitates Chess Kasparov distills the lessons he learned over a lifetime as a Grandmaster to offer a primer on successful decision-making: how to evaluate opportunities, anticipate the future, devise winning strategies.