Kilkenny wrote:Alex Baird wrote:My reply was in the context of turning up the power to "11". If the range is from 1 being totally inadequate, 5-8 being normal power range, and 10 being top end, then 11 is into the excessive range. Now, obviously, the 1-10 scale is a sliding one, depending on individuals and local norms, but "top end" should mean just that.
But, if I need to hit Lord Numbflesh at the equivalent of the local 11, then I know I am exceeding what is acceptable behavior among my peers. It then becomes a question of if I want to break what I consider to be the rules, simply to beat him. I don't think it right to do that for two reasons. First, and foremost, because I think "10" is the upper limit of what should be done. It's at 10 for a reason, and that reason is I don't want broken toys. Real disabling injury isn't something I want to inflict on a sparring partner. Second, because I don't want to cheat for the win. Throwing what I believe to be excessive force is every bit as much against our ruleset as not taking less than excessive is.
I think you are misinterpreting "11". We all have a range that we have trained to throw as "good" and a range we've learned to accept as "good". Hopefully those two match up reasonably well and we're not expecting our opponent to take feather kisses while requiring dented 12 gauge ourselves.
So the top end of each person's "good" range is their "10". I expect that most of us have some margin between the top end of what we normally throw as "good" and what we would consider "excessive". I would thing this especially true for experienced fighters who live in relatively light calibration areas. Their sword may go to 15 without getting to excessive, because their scale is different than their neighbors.
I start with heavy blows, and am willing to scale up somewhat from where I start. I've known people I needed to hit Hard, by my standards. I've had an occasion or two where I was not willing to give someone what they were asking for - because I won't go past a certain level of risk of injury to my opponent.
In other words, I don't consider "11" and "excessive" to be equivalent terms and I believe you are inappropriately equating them in your argument.
I was the one that brought up the "11" thing, but I think My point was misunderstood.
Say you are in a bout, and you throw what you think is an "8" using Alex Baird's scale above, and your opponent doesn't take it.
Now, keeping in mind that only the receiver can call the blows, what he is saying at that point is that your blow was actually a "4" or under. (assuming that a "5" is the lightest shot that can be called good).
So, you hit him with a "10"- that should equal one of his "6" shots, and he still doesn't take it.
Again, he is the judge of how heavy the shot was, and he's telling you it is light.
So you give him an "11", and he takes it.
Now, in your version of the scale, that 11 is excessive- but he, by refusing anything less, is telling you that it is "just enough".
I know I'm putting this across poorly, but my point is basically that as long as the receiver is the only one that can judge blows, a shot that just barely gets called good isn't excessive- even if it felt that way when you threw it.