@pemerton
Thanks for the response.
Personally, I don't see merit in inserting agency as a factor into what constitutes 'skilled play'. And I see only confusion arising from analysis that attempts to break play down into singular moments to be labelled as 'agency' or 'not agency' within the context of a game.
That is to say, if I sit down to play chess against Magnus Carlson - and we both agree to the same rules, time constraints, win conditions, shake hands and set our clocks - then we are playing with the same agency. What transpires in the game will then result from our skill at chess, and I'll lose. But I'll have played the full game with complete agency - that is, a full sight of the board state, and complete knowledge of the legal moves, and the win, draw and loss conditions.
Skill - that is, understanding or intuiting how to use your agency (assuming you have it) to achieve your goal - is, in my view, a seperate dimension of play. And the fact that, for example, in backgammon you might not have a move right now - either due to the bar or your dice roll and board position... that's not an agency issue either. Your agency isn't ebbing and flowing with the board state. It's there and present in the fact that you have rules and processes which you can use to try and achieve the win condition.
Thanks for the response.
Personally, I don't see merit in inserting agency as a factor into what constitutes 'skilled play'. And I see only confusion arising from analysis that attempts to break play down into singular moments to be labelled as 'agency' or 'not agency' within the context of a game.
That is to say, if I sit down to play chess against Magnus Carlson - and we both agree to the same rules, time constraints, win conditions, shake hands and set our clocks - then we are playing with the same agency. What transpires in the game will then result from our skill at chess, and I'll lose. But I'll have played the full game with complete agency - that is, a full sight of the board state, and complete knowledge of the legal moves, and the win, draw and loss conditions.
Skill - that is, understanding or intuiting how to use your agency (assuming you have it) to achieve your goal - is, in my view, a seperate dimension of play. And the fact that, for example, in backgammon you might not have a move right now - either due to the bar or your dice roll and board position... that's not an agency issue either. Your agency isn't ebbing and flowing with the board state. It's there and present in the fact that you have rules and processes which you can use to try and achieve the win condition.
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