Why did top chess players lose their minds?
What was up with that?
shareNot all. There are quite a few who were normal by most standards. I will admit, myself included, anybody who is a die hard chess fanatic does tend to have their own idiosyncrasies.
shareThere are a few top chess players who over the years have developed mental illnesses. Paul Morphy, Wilhelm Steinitz, and Bobby Fischer, to name a few. There are others who were or became very unpleasant people in their lives, like Alexander Alekhine.
However most top chess players are normal, rational people, and have a wide variety of personalities. Common to the very top players, Kasparov, Karpov, Magnus Carlsen, is an incredible work ethic, combined with a tremendous memory, and a natural talent for the game.
However, the very nature of the game, tends to draw obsessives, or people who have addictive personalities, so I wouldn't be surprised to find that some of the best players were a little eccentric or had issues with mental health at some point in their lives.
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Very well said. But I don't think it's the nature of the game that tends to draw obsessive people, I think the game makes you obsessive.
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To be fair, because of the nature of the game it tends to lead to somewhat paranoid thinking, speaking as someone who loves the game and played at a reasonably high level, in order to be good enough to play at tournament level, against Grandmasters you need to work very hard on your game constantly to remain in touch with current theory and keep sharp.
Devoting that amount of time to what is essentially a game tends to draw people who are obsessive. I also agree with you that chess can exacerbate any mental instability :)
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Which is why I hated Searching For Bobby Fischer. If the boy had to succeed in chess he had to obsess about it, his mother's insistence that he have a 'normal' life pretty much ensured that he would never fulfil his potential.
If all the great chess players and musicians of our times had parents who insisted their life should be 'normal' in the sense they shouldn't spend every living hour obsessing about what they were good at, we wouldn't have any of the geniuses that we see.
I think another thing to consider is that the nature of the game. You are constantly on the lookout for the other person trying to trap you, or out-smart you which does lead to paranoid thinking.
If you are a rational or balanced person, you can leave the board and leave this kind of thinking behind, but others may not be able to leave this behind and consequently it bleeds into their thinking when they aren't at the chessboard.
One can obsess about the game, and still retain one's sanity, but as has been shown in the past with some players like Morphy or Steinitz, it can lead to eccentric behaviour...
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There are a few top chess players who over the years have developed mental illnesses. Paul Morphy, Wilhelm Steinitz, and Bobby Fischer, to name a few. There are others who were or became very unpleasant people in their lives, like Alexander Alekhine.
I think Morphy was bitter because Howard Staunton - who was regarded by many as the strongest player in the world until 1850 or so - refused a match with him. The British Champion said he was occupied with his literary pursuits (he was a well-known Shakespearean scholar) but some people said he was dodging Morphy.
The film said he committed suicide (wrong) and "died surrounded by ladies' shoes". I am not sure about the significance of the last part since Morphy was living with his sister. Perhaps the filmmakers wanted to suggest that Morphy was like Eddie's character in Danish Girl.
No, it has been well documented that Morphy had several pairs of girls and women's shoes near his bathtub and had a certain ritual in dealing with them.
The place where Morphy died has become a restaurant and one can now visit there, along with his family house down the street, along with his grave. I believe him to be the best American chessplayer after Fischer. However, Morphy never believed in the profession of chess, he believed it to be a "gentlemen's " game.
Alekhine was a Nazi collaborator during WWII and wrote several anti-Semetic articles. He only went to Portugal after the end of the war.
He was in Spain a couple of years before the end.Quite a few chess players wound up mentally ill
shareThere is a thin line between being brilliant and mad. Its a common connection having a mental disorder and being gifted. Not just chess players. Some of the greatest artists, scientists and politicians.
sharethe movie is jewish propaganda against bobby who wasn't jew as they lied in the movie
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