Why no set of meta-rules can rank chess principles across every position, and what that impossibility means for how we justify our moves.
Chess improvement comes down to better decisions in unknown positions — and decisions reduce to two underlying abilities: seeing and evaluating.
Cheating in chess is a two-headed beast — detection and trust. On the 'cheating mind virus,' the erosion of trust, and why baseless public accusations harm chess more than cheating itself.
What a typical chess argument really looks like, and why a practical theory of chess is better built from scratch than inherited from the assumptions of modern chess culture.
Introducing the Axiom System: why modern chess culture's descriptive lens — doubled pawns, weak squares, outposts — says little about how we actually make decisions, and improve.