pran, on 2012-April-04, 03:12, said:
Would you care to elaborate on why (in your opinion) relevant inference from the choice of a particular bid (e.g. the asking bid) shall include not only what information he seeks (i.e. why he chose that particular bid) but also how the possible response calls are to be decoded to give this information (i.e. the explanation of the response calls)?
Sven,
Please read David's post
#344 in this thread. It clearly says in one sentence why you may be required to explain the responses to an asking bid after the asking bid has been made. That one line should have been the end of the discussion.
Your argument that you are not supposed to explain future calls doesn't hold. Nowhere in the Laws does it say that you are not supposed to or required to disclose future calls. The fact that Law 20F doesn't specifically mention that you have to explain future calls, does not excuse you from not explaining future calls
when they give "relevant inferences from the choice of [an] action [that has been made] where these are matters of partnership understanding". After all, Law 20F specifically says that you have to explain those. Not explaining the relevant inferences of an asking bid (which includes the response structure) is a breach of Law.
If you do not understand
how relevant inferences are given by the response structure, there have been several posts that have tried to explain that and I even gave an example where this happened in real life (
#178). IMO, this one example alone should make anybody realize that the response structure does affect what kind of hands will be used for the asking bid. (With another response structure my partner would have never asked with the hand he held).
Your argument that the explanation of future calls gives UI doesn't hold either.
Any explanation gives UI. It has been accepted that full disclosure trumps giving UI (see also WellSpyder's post
#351). And, as WellSpyder says, the effect of UI is limited. Only in the case where a pair doesn't know what they are playing is the UI significant. This happens to be the case at many ACBL clubs (see
my post in another thread) and probably some other small clubs as well, but in a serious competition this shouldn't happen.
Summarizing:
- Law 20F clearly states that you have to disclose relevant inferences.
- We have explained how, in the case of asking bids, the response structure gives those relevant inferences.
- Therefore, when asked, you will have to explain those relevant inferences, if necessary by giving the responses.
- The UI argument doesn't hold, since any explanation gives UI and it doesn't hold for other explanations either: FD trumps UI.
The argument that you use to debate the other side is that the Laws do not
specifically tell you that you have to explain future calls. From that you conclude that you are not allowed to explain future calls or cannot be required to explain future calls. You draw that conclusion so far that you argue that you
never have to explain future calls. You argue that you shouldn't even be required to explain future calls when Law 20F states that you do (because they give relevant inferences about calls that have been made). All because you state that you never have to explain future calls, while there is no basis in the Laws for your statement.
This whole debate started around the question whether an RA is allowed to forbid players to explain future calls. That would be allowed (Law 80B2e-f) if it wouldn't be against the Laws. In this case it is against Law 20F, because of the "relevant inferences" clause and, therefore, an RA is not allowed to forbid players to explain future calls if this information gives relevant inferences about bids that have been made. That is the answer to the question. Whether the ACBL will care is an entirely different question.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg