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Two Eyes
Path: EyesCollection · Prev: Eye · Next: FalseEye
Difficulty: Beginner
Keywords: Life & Death
One of the first things a beginner learns is that a group of stones must have, or must be able to make, two eyes in order to live.
This follows from the basic rules of go, which state that when a group's last liberty is removed, the group is captured (removed from the board). It follows that, if a group has at least two liberties which cannot be removed, then the group cannot be killed and is alive. This is because the opponent stones can't be placed on points that have no open points next to them, **This is not correct, right? One can place a stone on a point that has no open points next to it, as long as one of the neighboring points is occupied by one's color of stone, and that stone either has a liberty or is part of a group with at least one remaining liberty. Is this correct, or am I wrong? I have never finished a game of go, although I have recently started many. I am probably 31 kyu (ha ha). --Craig** (Liberties) - thus neither eyes of a two-eyed group can be occupied, without self capture. Note that sometimes an 'eye' may have two or more points in it, but that does not neccessarily make the group alive. Each living group needs two separate eyes. Look at Nakade and Life And Death for examples of this. An eye of 3,4,5,6, or more spaces can be separated into two Eyes, making it alive, depending on the situation. The empty points that separate big eyes into two smaller eyes are vital to the survival of that group and are extremely important to occupy. If occupied by an opponent, the group may be unable to make two eyes. See also Vital Point and Life And Death. -- Morten Pahle (10k). Edited by Stevertigo This page is part of the Eyes Collection. Path: EyesCollection · Prev: Eye · Next: FalseEye This is a copy of the living page "Two Eyes" at Sensei's Library. (C) the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0. |