This book discusses the Triple Set/Double Platform Game played on Model III, the Longitudinal Star Gate 14 Model. The triple set game involves three chess sets whose initial position set-up at the start of the game is GROUND-TO-GROUND (G-G) at Base(0), GROUND-TO-GROUND (G-G) also at Base(0) and AIR-TO-AIR (A-A) at Base(1). The Double Platform game involves two chess game boards or two StarFish Models. One of the game boards is the Bottom Platform or Ground Level which designates as the letter G, at Base(0). The other game board is the Top Platform or Air Level which designates as the letter A,…mehr
This book discusses the Triple Set/Double Platform Game played on Model III, the Longitudinal Star Gate 14 Model. The triple set game involves three chess sets whose initial position set-up at the start of the game is GROUND-TO-GROUND (G-G) at Base(0), GROUND-TO-GROUND (G-G) also at Base(0) and AIR-TO-AIR (A-A) at Base(1). The Double Platform game involves two chess game boards or two StarFish Models. One of the game boards is the Bottom Platform or Ground Level which designates as the letter G, at Base(0). The other game board is the Top Platform or Air Level which designates as the letter A, at Base(1). The two StarFish Models or two game boards serve as a single unit or game board. This single unit game board constitutes Model III, the Longitudinal Star Gate 14 Model. Since Triple Set Games involve the use of three chess sets, it is more complex in nature than the previously published Double Set games. The reason for this complexity is because the triple set games are much longer than the double set games. Hence, the triple set games require more Equations or Statements that describe the movements of the chess pieces on the game board. The movements of the chess pieces are in reference to the initial position of the chess piece BEFORE displacement and the final position of the chess piece AFTER displacement.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
The fascination of International Chess Competitions among professional players, like the Grand Masters from Russia, Gary Karpov, Kasparov and Vladimir Kraminik and the Grand Masters form U.S.A., Bobby Fisher and Paul Morphy, intuitively spark my desire to design chess games that require higher degrees of cognitive elasticity. My experiences in past chess games at the non-competitive levels reflects a state of boredom. I find that raising the levels of cognitive techniques, rules and applications of this mental warfare game, an avid chess enthusiast would find no comparison to the scope, brevity, depth, dexterity and richness this Advance Chess game offers, to which, may I add, was my design and may someday be marketable world-wide. This brings to mind how little, we as masters of the planet, use our mental capabilities for our daily decision-making processes. We only use a minuscule fraction of our total mental capacities and thus, cease to develop our minds to their full potential, thereby, leaving it to remain in its infancy. The brevity of computers or application robotics, in conjunction with artificial intelligence, in comparison to the human mind is comparable to just a speck of sand along a vast ocean floor. The link of today's progressive technologies has only widened the expanse of our understanding of the human mind and its network complexities. An adaptable developing mind is capable of adjusting and surviving the pressures of today's rapid technological progression. The frequent use of the techniques that apply to the games of Advance Chess does produce, from my understanding of the biological synaptic composition of our minds, an alert conscious mind which is relatively free from the drawbacks of Attention Deficit Hypertension Disorder (A.D.H.D.) that is an ailment of many people globally. Thus, the techniques of play in the Advance Chess games require the use of a keen sense of concentration and an awareness of the rules and regulations pertaining to the model in question. This follows a common phrase, "Use it or lose it." The key to a successful completion for any Player in Advance Chess Games is the willingness to have an open mind and a particularly keen awareness of the techniques, rules and applications that apply to that particular model. When I play Advance Chess whether it is solitaire (with an imaginary opponent) or with a challenger, I almost always apply the motto: " When you have exhausted all the possibilities, whatever remains, however infinitesimal, then becomes a possibility ". Enjoy and have fun while at play, because, " You are what you think, you think therefore you are". After all, it is not so much about the thrill of winning games as it is about the ardent quality of play as it relates to the rules and applications that precedes the Patterns and Processes of the logic sequential premise that Advance Chess offers.
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497