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Author Topic:   The limitations of common sense
tsig
Member (Idle past 2938 days)
Posts: 738
From: USA
Joined: 04-09-2004


Message 49 of 66 (303459)
04-12-2006 8:02 AM
Reply to: Message 25 by Omnivorous
04-10-2006 9:33 AM


poker
Nothing sharpens the statistical sense like a busted straight and a called bluff
Sounds more like betting on the come, than bluffing.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 25 by Omnivorous, posted 04-10-2006 9:33 AM Omnivorous has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 50 by Modulous, posted 04-12-2006 9:09 AM tsig has replied

  
tsig
Member (Idle past 2938 days)
Posts: 738
From: USA
Joined: 04-09-2004


Message 62 of 66 (304380)
04-15-2006 5:09 AM
Reply to: Message 50 by Modulous
04-12-2006 9:09 AM


willing to learn
The poker terminology for it is 'semi-bluff'. Common sense gets a lot of poker things very wrong and I have a lot to thank David Sklansky for ridding me of my intuition and giving me a new one
:
Who is David Sklansky and can he help me to retire early?
This message has been edited by ts, 04-15-2006 05:10 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 50 by Modulous, posted 04-12-2006 9:09 AM Modulous has replied

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 Message 63 by Modulous, posted 04-17-2006 7:16 PM tsig has not replied
 Message 64 by tsig, posted 04-18-2006 3:06 AM tsig has not replied

  
tsig
Member (Idle past 2938 days)
Posts: 738
From: USA
Joined: 04-09-2004


Message 64 of 66 (304883)
04-18-2006 3:06 AM
Reply to: Message 62 by tsig
04-15-2006 5:09 AM


Re: learning
Sklansky is one of the leading authorities on poker books. He is the deviser of the Fundamental Theorem of Poker, and lays out the mathematical considerations one should consider whilst playing poker of all varieties. Check out some of his books for more info. A word of warning though: most of his work is primarily concerned with mid-high limit poker, so most of the work is too subtle to work in most people's poker career (unless you have a massive multi-k bankroll).
I enjoyed reading the books, but to make some proper headway into small and mid stakes try Lee Jones' work for low limit hold 'em. With his much simpler poker playing style it is easier to pick up the fundamentals from which you can begin intergrating Sklansky's work. I have made a profit (small) from Jones' techniques.
To retire early, you need the Poker Bible, or more accurately the Principia Poker - The Theory of Poker by David Sklansky and Mason Malmuth (I don't have the book close to hand so I'm not sure if Malmuth is credited as an author, though he did have significant influence either way). I can say with high confidence that basically all serious limit poker players have read it...and in it, common sense is often turned on its head entirely (I think you are suitably warned :-D).
This message is a reply to:
Message 62 by ts, posted 04-15-2006 05:09 AM
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sometimes a duce of spades will beat cased aces.

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