Die harmonie der welt: chess | thearticle

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When the German composer Paul Hindemith (1895-1963) wrote his symphony _Die Harmonie der Welt_ (later to metamorphose into an opera of the same name) I doubt that he had chess in mind.


However, there is, I believe a connection. Hindemith’s _Harmony of the World_ focuses on the life of astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) a student of the eccentric Tycho Brahe. Brahe was


himself a groundbreaking observer of the universe. He inhabited a castle called the Fortress of the Stars (Uraniborg) and wore a false bronze nose for everyday use, saving his gold and


silver prosthetic noses for best. Tycho’s original nose had been slashed in a duel, not blasted by celestial lightning from the heavens, which so obsessed him. Kepler led a less dramatic


existence, concentrating, without much incident, on establishing the harmonic relationship between earth, the remaining planets and the sun. And this is where chess comes into the equation.


World chess champion Vassily Smyslov once published an anthology of his chessboard masterpieces entitled _In Search of Harmony_, a volume, by the way, in which I figure as one of the great


man’s victims. Chess is an area of human endeavour, which, in common with mathematics and music, allows child prodigies to demonstrate astounding genius. And I suggest that “Harmony” is the


key. Consider the young Mozart. Among so many other precocious musical achievements, such as composing _a Minuet and Trio in G Major_ aged five, he was able to reconstruct and transcribe


Allegri’s _Miserere_ from memory, having heard the closely guarded score just once during a visit to The Vatican. It should be recalled that at the age of fourteen, Mozart also wrote his


first opera: _Mitridate Re di Ponto_, or “Mithridates, King of Pontus”. In mathematics alarming precocity was displayed by, for example, Ruth Lawrence, who graduated from Oxford University


age thirteen with a starred first class Honours Degree; not to mention John Nunn, who went up to Oxford at the age of fifteen to pursue his mathematical studies. Nunn, who also distinguished


himself as a chess-playing prodigy, went on to become a grandmaster and professional player, who numbered even the legendary Anatoly Karpov amongst his scalps. Indeed, accounts abound of


amazingly youthful chess prodigies, including José Capablanca who allegedly picked up the moves of the game aged four, simply by watching his father play. Then there was Paul Morphy who at


twelve defeated the illustrious European Master Lowenthal, and perhaps most spectacular of all, Bobby Fischer, US champion at the age of fourteen and victor of the so-called Game of the


Century when he was thirteen. It seems to me that there must be some quality which links chess, music and mathematics. I believe that quality to be an inner harmony which connects all three


activities and which the youthful human brain is capable of identifying. The striking factor is that prodigies in chess, music and mathematics are capable of performing at the highest level


without significant prior experience. It would be unthinkable for a child or young teenager to paint like Leonardo da Vinci or write with the depth of Tolstoy or Shakespeare, since the


relative life experience would not yet have been accumulated — in general such dimensions would be missing. For music, maths and chess, on the other hand, the prodigies appear to be able to


leap the chasm of experience and tap directly into an underlying harmony, a harmony which most of us cannot easily perceive. Apart from John Nunn, who was proficient in both maths and chess


from an early age, it is worth noting that Smyslov (World Chess Champion from 1957-1958) was also an accomplished opera singer. Meanwhile, Soviet Chess Grandmaster Mark Taimanov enjoyed a


second career as a concert pianist. With the advent of computers, such as the Demis Hassabis Alpha Zero, new dimensions of harmony are now constantly being revealed. At first sight, or to


the uninitiated, the moves and strategies of Alpha Zero may appear opaque. Queens moved to fantastically improbable attacking squares such as H1, at the rearwards furthest extremity of the


board, or sacrifices made for no apparent immediate compensation. Yet World Champion Magnus Carlsen has carried out a deep study of the program’s games and drawn advantageous conclusions for


his own strategies. Harmony is there and Magnus has located it. This week’s game is a startling victory from the recently concluded Gibraltar Masters, where the 14-year-old Indian prodigy


Praggnanandhaa overwhelms Bulgarian Grandmaster Vesselin Topalov, a former champion of FIDE (Fédération Internationale des Échecs), the World Chess Federation. The game can be seen here.


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