Team Genius: The New Science of High-Performing Organizations (32 page)

BOOK: Team Genius: The New Science of High-Performing Organizations
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37.
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38.
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47.
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48.
Ibid.

49.
Ibid.

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In a 2005 interview with Diane L. Coutu, a senior editor at the
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, Kasparov explained:

People who see chess as a scientific pursuit played by some kind of human supercomputer may be surprised, but it takes more than logic to be a world-class chess player. That’s because chess is a mathematically infinite game. The total number of possible different moves in a single game of chess is more than the number of seconds that have elapsed since the Big Bang created the universe. Many people don’t recognize that. They look at the chessboard and they see 64 squares and 32 pieces and they think that the game is limited. It’s not, and even at the highest levels it is impossible to calculate very far out. I can think maybe 15 moves in advance, and that’s about as far as any human has gone. Inevitably, you reach a point when you’ve got to navigate by using your imagination and feelings rather than your intellect or logic. At that moment, you are playing with your gut.

66.
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78.
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8027, pp. 199–208.

BOOK: Team Genius: The New Science of High-Performing Organizations
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