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For most of chess history, the strongest available evaluation of a position lived inside the player. Now it lives on a phone. A modern engine on consumer hardware analyses any non-trivial position more accurately than the strongest unaided human, and a fair-play algorithm can second-guess every move within hours of the final handshake. The player still has to sit there for four or five hours and decide.
The Human Move is a serious, literary argument about what competitive chess has actually become in the engine era - and what it has always been. Written from inside the game by a competitive player based in Doha, the book makes a single sustained case across seven chapters: chess is not dying because engines became stronger. Chess is becoming clearer about what it always was, namely a sport of human decision under constraint.
What the book argues:
The final chapter turns the argument outward to the actors who shape the conditions under which players develop: players, parents, coaches, academies, platforms, federations, organisers, and the businesses that build chess products. Each layer has the same job stated differently.
Who this book is for: competitive players who want a serious account of the modern game from inside it; coaches and academies building developmental architecture for the engine era; parents of junior players trying to understand what their child is actually doing at the board; and readers of sport, cognitive science, and philosophy of competition who want chess treated as the test case it is.
Drawing on the published literature in cognitive science, sport psychology, and philosophy of sport, and on the institutional record of FIDE and the principal online chess platforms, The Human Move is a structural argument, not a self-help book and not a moral panic about artificial intelligence. The engine has clarified the contest. It has not abolished it. The future of chess is not human versus machine. It is human responsibility under machine review.
The Human Move is the first book in the Lessons from the Board series.
Ahoj! Jsem Libroamiko, tvůj knižní rádce.
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