Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Activists protest against chess as 'racist'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Don't you know quarks come with colour charges?


    Yes, but I don't recall positrons or electrons being composed of quarks.
    Arise ye starvelings from your slumbers; arise ye prisoners of want
    The reason for revolt now thunders; and at last ends the age of "can't"
    Away with all your superstitions -servile masses, arise, arise!
    We'll change forthwith the old conditions And spurn the dust to win the prize

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Ancyrean


      It doesn't count as art at all, but I remember in Star Wars episode IV (?) 3PO was playing some kind of holo-chess with Chewy . On a more obscure note, your mention of 'the Prisoner' episode (which I didn't see) reminded me of yet another scene, but in the Conan the Barbarian comic series (does anybody remember Conan? ). There, there was this king playing chess with a foreign dignitary on a huge board with real people, and the "pieces" had to actually kill eachother if a piece "took" another. He was casually chatting with Conan I guess as he carelessly lost his queen, who was run through by a knight after just having stabbed a pawn-dude...
      I seem to recall an 'Avengers' episode that involved chess pieces too.....



      And I know that Matisse painted several paintings with men playing chess within the precincts of a mosque when he spent time in North Africa. Several of his paintings of odalisques also involve either chessboard patterns or a chess set.


      I always loved those beautiful sunsoaked paintings of his from the Maghreb, where men sit or loll in clear light on a Berber rug, watching goldfish in a bowl, or using a narghileh, or sipping tea. It was only when I went to Morocco for myself that I realized why it had such a profound effect on him, and on Delacroix too.

      The difference betwen the quality of light under Northern skies, and the sunlight to be found in Morocco was astonishing, and then there were the whitewashed buildings, the indigo dye, the wrought iron around windows....


      Anyway- didn't a caliph or sultan ban the playing of chess for a while, although to no lasting effect, thankfully?
      Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

      ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Natalinasmpf
        Don't you know quarks come with colour charges?


        Yes, but I don't recall positrons or electrons being composed of quarks.
        So? At least half of the elementary particles don't have charges.
        (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
        (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
        (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

        Comment


        • Originally posted by molly bloom
          And I know that Matisse painted several paintings with men playing chess within the precincts of a mosque when he spent time in North Africa. Several of his paintings of odalisques also involve either chessboard patterns or a chess set.

          I always loved those beautiful sunsoaked paintings of his from the Maghreb, where men sit or loll in clear light on a Berber rug, watching goldfish in a bowl, or using a narghileh, or sipping tea. It was only when I went to Morocco for myself that I realized why it had such a profound effect on him, and on Delacroix too.

          The difference betwen the quality of light under Northern skies, and the sunlight to be found in Morocco was astonishing, and then there were the whitewashed buildings, the indigo dye, the wrought iron around windows...
          Ahh, the charms of the Orient...

          Originally posted by molly bloom
          Anyway- didn't a caliph or sultan ban the playing of chess for a while, although to no lasting effect, thankfully?
          I remember a story like that too...According to this site, in the Islamic world there was some suspicion towards the game and debate about it in the beginning. One caliph, al-Mahdi, urged the religious leaders in Mecca in 780 "to give up gambling with dice and chess" but his idea died with him, fortunately for the game . There was also a ban in Egypt on the game in early 11th century (end of ban unspecified, but presumably didn't last the ruler that decreed it). It seems like after this, chess was an accepted game in the Islamic world. The only exception, lo and behold, is the Islamic revolution in Iran nearly a millenium after the last mentionable ban (suckers ). "Chess players went underground with their boards and pieces" from 1981, when it was declared forbidden, until 1988, when Khomaini finally cared to decree it as OK. I'm also surprised to learn that the history of chess in the West was more checkered () according to these sites.

          Also, some interesting footnotes here in this site.
          "Common sense is as rare as genius" - Ralph Waldo Emerson

          Comment


          • The only exception, lo and behold, is the Islamic revolution in Iran nearly a millenium after the last mentionable ban (suckers ). "Chess players went underground with their boards and pieces" from 1981, when it was declared forbidden, until 1988, when Khomaini finally cared to decree it as OK.
            I always thought them among the most backwards government in the world, though I'd never thought it'd be by a thousand years.
            Visit First Cultural Industries
            There are reasons why I believe mankind should live in cities and let nature reclaim all the villages with the exception of a few we keep on display as horrific reminders of rural life.-Starchild
            Meat eating and the dominance and force projected over animals that is acompanies it is a gateway or parallel to other prejudiced beliefs such as classism, misogyny, and even racism. -General Ludd

            Comment


            • Ancyrean and others:

              To view chess merely as a military game is a failure of the imagination.

              War is an extension of politics, and chess reflects all the strategic policitical manoeverings of both.

              Hence bishops are as powerful as knights. The influence of church leaders on nations was as significant as warriors.

              IMHO
              Best MMORPG on the net: www.cyberdunk.com?ref=310845

              An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind. -Gandhi

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Urban Ranger

                Originally posted by Urban Ranger
                Don't you know quarks come with colour charges?

                Originally posted by natalinasmpf
                Yes, but I don't recall positrons or electrons being composed of quarks .


                So? At least half of the elementary particles don't have charges.
                But positrons and electrons do...

                Their energy when they annhiliate forms a photon, that will be of a certain unified colour...(heck they may release photons of different frequencies, but it will still be one colour because they are combined)...

                And furthermore, colour charges don't really affect colour. Its an analogy to the whole "RGB makes white" thing...that three different types of colour charged particles makes neutral.
                Last edited by Natalinasmpf; August 26, 2004, 15:03.
                Arise ye starvelings from your slumbers; arise ye prisoners of want
                The reason for revolt now thunders; and at last ends the age of "can't"
                Away with all your superstitions -servile masses, arise, arise!
                We'll change forthwith the old conditions And spurn the dust to win the prize

                Comment

                Working...
                X