* S is a bidding structure (system, convention, treatment...)
* S' is the structure whe get by replacing the substructure T of S with the structure T' and making the obvious updates (pretending that makes sense)
Then say that the replacement of T by T', which I'll denote by 'T -> T'', is a 'utilitarian sacrifice' with respect to S if
* S is better than S' on hands suitable for T or T' (i.e. T -> T' is a "sacrifice")
* S' is at least as good as S (i.e. T -> T' is "for the commmon good")
Are there good examples of utilitarian sacrifices in this sense?
To give you a better idea what I'm talking about, suppose
S = 2/1
T = WJS
T'= RFR
Then, just arguably,
* S is better than S' on hands suitable for T (true, IMO)
* S is better than S' on hands suitable for T'(debatable, although 1m-2♠ as inv RFR is horrible when used, IMO),
* S' is at least as good as S (that's what RFR proponents believe, anyway)
in which case WJS -> RFR would be a utilitarian sacrifice with respect to standard 2/1.
This post has been edited by nullve: 2016-February-25, 04:42