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General principles of strategy / tactics / decision-making
Table of contents
Child pages
Related links
- Wikipedia - List of military strategies and concepts
- I should mine this for ideas to talk about.
Misc ideas
- Link to the coursera course on General Game Playing, and that video in it which describes general principles (increase your options, try to decrease your opponent's options, etc.).
- I need to write about how sometimes there's some heuristic that dominates all other considerations, like when I was playing poker and following a fairly simple heuristic and everyone else was trying to calculate pot odds.
Deny your opponents information / don't show weakness
Bas Rutten's Career MMA Fight #9 vs. Frank Shamrock
And again, like I said before, he's cross-facing me all the time. It's a thing that I really like to do also with opponents because it's really stressing your opponent; you can't look [to] the other side--obviously--if you [are being] cross-face[d]. You see (referring to his getting cross-faced again in the video): now I cannot look what happens to the left of me.
2015.09.27 - NYT - Putin’s Credo: Never Let Them See You Sweat
“We demonstrated weakness,” Mr. Putin said in another context, “and the weak are beaten.”
Divide and conquer
Examples
- Adolf Hitler and Nazism
- Example 1: The elimination of Nazism's political enemies in Germany.
- The Nazis, like Stalin in Russia, purged the country of their political opponents as they gained more power. My understanding is that they were actually very successful at doing this.
- Related: Poem: First they came ...
First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Jew.
- Example 1: The elimination of Nazism's political enemies in Germany.
- Example 2: The war itself.
- I'm not sure how Hitler made the decision about which countries to attack first, but it seems to me that it might have been smarter to try to eliminate Russia before engaging in any kind of war with France and England.
- He may have seen France and England as the more serious threats, that would make it more understandable that he would want to neutralize them first.
- Example 2: The war itself.
Don't unthinkingly follow the advice you get from other people
- People love to talk. People love to opine. A lot of people are willing to give others advice even if they aren't experts. If you lazily accept their advice as being the right answer, you may get screwed.
Frank Zappa
If you end up with a boring miserable life because you listened to your mom, your dad, your teacher, your priest, or some guy on television telling you how to do your shit, then you deserve it.
Bas Rutten's Career MMA Fight #11 vs. Ken Shamrock
And here we are against Ken Shamrock. I gotta tell you this story, I was training three weeks with a person and I said, "Listen, I want you to tell me how to stop me from getting into a knee bar", because I know Ken is very good at a knee bar. He told me, but he told me there was only one way. He should have told me a real easy thing, and I will show you right now what he should have told me...Watch what happens...He breaks my guard...and he goes for a half-guard. Now, the only thing that I have to do right now is grab a hold on Ken's right leg. If I hold that leg, he can never step over. But the person who told me said "No, no, he's gonna step it over your hip." So I was looking at my hip...and not anywhere else...See, I'm looking at my hip...and he swings it now, over my head. So he [the trainer] told me the wrong way. He should have told me, "Just hold his leg, nothing can happen." Anyway, this fight I lost again, but this was the last fight that I lost. After this I listened to nobody anymore. I found my own training partner, and that was it. No more losses for Bas Rutten.
Learn from / Practice to eliminate your weaknesses
Bas Rutten's Career MMA Fight #12 vs. Takaku Fuke
- Bas was trained as a striker in his early career and lost several fights because of his ignorance of ground fighting. He was very smart about learning from his mistakes, though, and this fight was the first where he used his new knowledge of the ground game to win:
Now I'm getting good on the ground. Now I'm training two times a day, ground fighting. [...] See, now I don't let anybody go the side-mount anymore, because I start learning submissions. He didn't know that I was better on the ground now, so he's gonna make a mistake. I go back to the guard, I don't want to make any mistakes, I don't want to take any risks. [...] He's going to go for a leg lock right now but what a strange thing to do, because right now, I know leg locks too. Heel hook on the right, and now heel hook on his right leg. And that's it! Bas Rutten enters the world of submissions, ladies and gentlemen.
[...] He's going for a heel hook but as you can see, I defend myself by stretching my right leg. Now I'm pulling his right leg–his knee I'm pulling down, which exposes his heel, his right heel, and I was just pulling, and it's over, end of the story.
- You also see Bas using cross face in this fight where he didn't in his earlier fights.
Bas Rutten's Career MMA Fight #13 vs. Maurice Smith
- Just 2 fights earlier, Bas had lost to a particular combination. In this fight he uses the exact combination he lost to against a new opponent.
And I learn from my mistakes. You remember the knee bar with Ken Shamrock? Pushing the arm, and making a knee bar? I thought that was a good thing for me to do the same thing. Watch this...I'm gonna push his arm down, exactly like Ken Shamrock did with me, and then I go for the same knee bar that Ken Shamrock did to me. And voila! It actually works. And that was it!
[...]
I'm pushing his arm like I'm going for a figure-four–"distraction" is what they call that. Go around his face, all the way, 180 degrees, and go for the knee bar.
Prefer paths that are likely to achieve multiple objectives
Examples
- Example: Changing my name stood to achieve multiple objectives.
- It might help me avoid general job discrimination (although that wasn't really a motivator).
- It might help me have a better chance with the types of women I found attractive.
- It could later serve as a signal in my professional life that I was willing to do unusual things.
- It gave me more experience doing things differently from other people, and dealing with the psychological / peer pressure that a person can face when doing something like that.
- Example: My method for lowering my housing expenses stood to achieve multiple objectives.
- It freed up money to be spent on other entrepreneurial projects.
- I ended up more mobile than I was before.
- It gave me experience being frugal.
- It gave me experience working on an entrepreneurial project.
- It gave me experience betting a lot of money on an idea and having it pay off.
- It might later serve as a signal in my professional life that I was willing to do unusual things.
Prefer paths that are likely to leave you with more options
Examples
- Example: My inclination to start a company that will let me live from anywhere.
Spend time thinking about which potential actions will actually affect your state
2014.05.16 - USC - 5 minute Commencement Speech
I've got apparently about five or six minutes to say the most useful things I can think of. I'm gonna do my best. And it was just that I distill things down to three items; I think I'll go with four. I think these are pretty important ones. Some of them are going to sound like well you've heard it before but it's worth reemphasizing.
(...)
Then, I'd say focus on signal over noise. A lot of companies get confused. They spend money on things that don't actually make the product better. So, for example, at Tesla we've never spent any money on advertising. We put all the money into R&D and manufacturing and design to try to make the car as good as possible. And I think that's the way to go, so...for any given company, just keep thinking about, "Are these efforts that people are expending, are they resulting in a better product or service?", and if they're not, stop those efforts.
Magic: The Gathering - CABS Theory
BOARD AFFECTING CARDS OR NOTHING
"It doesn't affect the board state, though."I've said this so many times. I've even said it in this column, I'm sure. It's something I think about a lot when I'm evaluating a card, or building a deck, or making a choice in a booster draft.
My theory is that you can only have so many cards that don't affect the board state directly before your deck starts to suffer.
I call this "CABS" Theory, which is short for "Cards (that) Affect the Board State".
Most people don't factor in whether a card affects the board or not when they evaluate a card. The questions are usually centered around outright power level, "rate" (basically The Vanilla Test, but for all cards. Think "efficiency"), overall mana cost, etc. And this makes some sense, too. After all, many very strong cards don't directly affect the board state at all.
Spend time to get a view of the big picture
Examples
- Solving global health issues
- HealthData.org - The Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) - Data Visualization
- 2015.09.15 - GatesNotes - The Brilliant Doctor Behind My Favorite Obscure Website
As Chris would explain a few years later: “Nobody would imagine starting out on a long journey without knowing where they're going and what route they would take. Yet, if you look at global health, that was where the world was—huge ignorance about what people died from.”
Much of the data was available previously, but it was scattered around the world—buried in various countries’ databases and in printed reports that gathered dust on office shelves. The GBD brings it all together, synthesizes it, and makes it available to everyone. Thanks to input from experts around the world, it keeps getting more accurate. It is slowly becoming the standard go-to resource for health data in rich and poor countries alike.
Train hard for a specific attack and execute it as rapidly as possible
Examples
Bas Rutten's Career MMA Fight #10 vs. Manabu Yamada
I trained hard for this fight, and I trained for a side-choke, knowing that he was a master in escaping situations, because if you can go 30 minutes against Ken [Shamrock] without getting submit[ted] one time, you've gotta be good.
He's in my half-guard right now...and now watch I'm gonna do a really tricky move, watch this...I'm gonna push him over...and now I slap a side-choke on. And I couldn't believe it, that I had the side-choke, so I gave it everything I had, I kept squeezing, and squeezing. And watch his right arm...it drops right now, he's already out, but I'm still squeezing as hard as I can.
[...]
Slow motion please, here we go...I buck up, and watch what he does, he positions himself the wrong way, his left arm, he leaves it next to my head, which makes him very vulnerable for a side-choke...which I'm applying right now. The only thing I have to do right now to complete this whole choke, to make it way more dangerous and effective, is to put him on his back, and that's what I'm doing right now.
The Duel of the Century - The Judicial Combat of Jarnac and Châtaigneraye - France, 1547
- This was one of the most memorable stories I have ever heard.
- The ARMA page goes on and on with lots of details, but the basic story is this: A really experienced fighter challenged a totally-inexperienced fighter to a duel. The inexperienced guy was allowed to choose the weapon, so he listed like 30 different weapons that they might use on the day of the duel. The inexperienced guy then trained really hard with just one of those weapons, and trained really hard with just a single tricky move with that weapon that he could execute at the beginning of the fight. The move wasn't designed to be a finishing move (a move that would outright kill the opponent); it was designed to be enough to disable the opponent. He then used that move as soon as he could.