In competitive chess you cannot 'tell someone to make your move'.
No, dumb dumb, I'm saying you COULD change the rules of chess to make it play like this, and NOTHING meaningful would change about the game, because the point of chess is decision making, not muscular exertion.
Additionally, you move your arm to press your side of the chess timer as well as move your pieces with the use of your intellectual knowledge in the game.
This has nothing to do with chess ability though. You don't win by moving your arm the best, you win by making better decisions than your opponent. In other sports you make decisions but you need a coordinated series of muscle contractions to make the decision actually play out.
In golf, I can "decide" to go long onto the green over the trees...but I can only do that if I swing the club with the right speed and trajectory. Almost all of the skill is
carrying out decision, and you can even have your caddy help the make the decisions for you. Because the skill is actually in the muscular contractions in executing the shot.
In chess, anybody can move knight to e7, there's literally no skill involved in doing that whatsoever. The skill is DECIDING to move knight to e7. Once the decision has been made, it takes no physical skill to carry out that decision and nobody wins chess because of their ability to physically move the pieces around the board better than their opponent.
Also by this logic, online chess either isn't a sport, or, anything that involves clicking a mouse is a sport. See how dumb this is?
This means there is both a physical and mental decision making. In other words, your argument doesn't make sense.
There
isn't a physical aspect though. Is poker a sport, because I move the chips from my stack into the middle of table? Exact same shit. It isn't a skill, it's a standard procedural movement to display to everyone what your DECISION was.[/quote][/quote]