aguahombre, on 2013-November-20, 10:06, said:
My basis for the assertion in the first sentence (which you quoted) was stated in my next sentence (which you didn't). If the UI does not provide any additional information to that which the AI provided, and he says he was using the AI ---I will believe he is using the AI and not the UI.
Then we're not speaking the same language. You wrote (omitting two earlier short sentences that are irrelevant to this point, but including the next two):
aguahombre, on 2013-November-19, 23:09, said:
Authorized information is usable. Unauthorization is not. When a player has both, and they lead to the same conclusion, he is using the AI and not the UI. If he can articulate the AI he is using, good luck proving he is not telling the truth.
To me, the "first" (third in the fuller quote above) sentence is a general, stand-alone assertion, for which you have given no basis. You didn't link the next sentence to it in any way that means anything to me, and in any event I don't think that it does provide such support.
You are essentially saying "If the player has the same information available from AI and from UI then (a) if he can say so, and that he's used the AI and not the UI, then I will believe him, and (b) for bridge law purposes I will then treat him as having used AI and not having used UI." This is fine as a statement of personal views; it is questionable as a statement of what the bridge laws actually are, as blackshoe said:
blackshoe, on 2013-November-20, 07:23, said:
This is a flawed interpretation of the law. In particular, Law 16B1{a} does not mention AI at all — it says that when a player has UI, he may not choose from among logical alternatives one that could demonstrably have been suggested by the UI. The presence of AI "saying the same thing" is irrelevant.
I'm sorry to be so picky - not least, because my personal views on what the laws should say are probably quite close to yours and campboy's - but it does seem to be an area where imprecise use of language leads us astray. For example:
campboy, on 2013-November-20, 08:20, said:
The information content of the AI given the UI and that of the UI given the AI are both zero, as you say ...
No, I emphatically did not say that, because this slurs the distinction that I was careful to draw. What I said was that the
additional information content was zero, but the actual information content remains the same. If both the AI and the UI have the same information content X, Y & Z then that is what they both have, but neither adds additional information to the other. blackshoe is saying (and this is what I understood the generally accepted interpretation to be) that because the UI retains its information content of X, Y & Z that information is what needs to be taken into account when considering what is "suggested". You and campboy appear to be arguing that it is only any
additional information (nil in this example). Slurring this distinction leads campboy to fallacies (or at best careless use of language) such as:
campboy, on 2013-November-20, 05:52, said:
And if the UI adds no new information then it can't suggest anything.
the point being that whilst the null additional information indeed suggests nothing the actual information content of the UI (here X, Y & Z) can suggest plenty.
We use "UI" rather loosely. I think that a more fruitful line of argument is to focus on the definition of "extraneous information" in Law 16A3, which broadly speaking seems to correspond to what we might loosely express as UI-AI, any information that is available from unauthorised sources and not also from authorised ones, essentially what you're both talking about. Law 16B is couched in terms of "extraneous information", not "unauthorised information". Unfortunately, Law 74C, which is rather more general in its scope, uses "unauthorised information" and not "extraneous information".
It seems that we're all giving the meaning of the wording rather more careful attention than the drafters did. It would be helpful if at the next revision they started out by deciding exactly what they wanted to achieve by the relevant laws, and then drafted them accordingly with a bit more care. Among the things to take into account is whether the AI was available before the UI with which it overlaps, or only afterwards.