jgbrowning said:
I think you made a leap from "no longer recognizible" to "indistinguishable."
Um, no. I am dreadfully sorry. It seems the language center of my brain went out for a night on the town without me. There was no leap of reasoning there. I was simply using the wrong damn word. My sincerest apologies for what must now seem like a thoroughly irrational position.
There is no other method of telling the difference between two games unless one actually compares those difference. How important each difference is until something is considered something else is always subjective based upon individual opinions.
That there is no other way does not imply that the one available way is useful

If the only quantifiable way says nothing about what's actually important, then that quantification really doesn't measure what we need measured.
And Dammit, Umbran, don't use phrases like (naively defined above). Think of a better way of saying what you mean that isn't calling me names.
Again, my apologies. Clearly, this has not been my best day in terms of language use.
I was using "naive" in the way it is often used in mathematics and science - it is not meant as a slur. It simply admits that the thing is a first pass and perhaps too simplistic. This was to leave room for other schemes (for example, one that gave a weighting for how integral the rule was for operation of the system - game theory allows for such).
Also, please note that I was the one who wrote down that one would have to determine what counted as a rule, and enumerate each, and do a literal counting. As far as I was concerned, since it appeared in my post, that definition of the measure was
mine. I was saying
my construction was naive. Not that you were naive.
So joe, please accept my apologies. I wrote poorly, and what got across wasn't at all what I meant to say.