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Article
Affiliation(s)

St. Derevlyanskaya, 19a, of.54, Kyiv 04119, Ukraine

ABSTRACT

In the first part of the article, the incomprehensible victories of the American grandmaster Robert Fisher over the candidates Mark Taimanov, Bent Larsen and Tigran Petrosyan in 1971 for the right to play the match for the World Chess Champion title with the former champion Boris Spassky and the victory over the champion himself in 1972 are first served as a detective story hypothesis proposed by Academician Viktor Glushkov. According to this hypothesis, R. Fisher used the prompts of a super-productive computer installed in the United States, in which a highly efficient computer chess program was played along with the matches. Communication with the computer provided a team of employees of the CIA. In the second part, the author, having reviewed briefly the history of computer chess programs, rejects the hypothesis of the academician and proposes his own.

KEYWORDS

Chess game, chess match, chess competition, international chess tournament, chess championship, chess player, computer chess program, international master, grandmaster, candidate (contender, applicant, challenger), world chess champion, debut, defense, endgame, victory, draw, defeat.

Cite this paper

Karachenets D. 2019. “Academician Glushkov and Grandmaster Fisher.” Journal of Mathematics and System Science 9: 21-39.

References
[1] Wikipedia. Mark Taimanov.
[2] Wikipedia. Bent Larsen.
[3] Wikipedia. Tigran Petrosian.
[4] Wikipedia. Boris Spassky.
[5] Wikipedia. Bobby Fischer.
[6] Wikipedia. Norbert Wiener.
[7] Wikipedia. Claude Shannon.
[8] Wikipedia. Computer chess.

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