barmar, on 2014-November-22, 20:04, said:
[...]
For those who don't get BW, here's a summary of the arguments they give against automatically taking the word of the bidder (I've mostly just quoted the first sentence of each paragraph in the editorial):
- Allowing a partnership to announce an agreement "after the fact" negligently fails to demand responsibility for correctly informing one's opponents in advance.
- It permits self-serving declarations to be accepted as fact.
- It supersedes hard evidence (the disagreement) with, at best, one person's possibly-faulty memory.
- In some MI cases, it increases the chance that the wrong side will suffer any actual injustice.
- Accepting the actor's statement of an agreement that applies to his action can be wrong if if (a) the actor (but not his partner) is wrong; (b) both partners are wrong; or (c ) there was no agreement.
- It is relatively ineffective to treat symptoms without attacking the underlying disease.
I feel confused.
Does the article question the words of the
bidder or the words of the
explainer (and which words)?
If the bidder claims that he called according to the partnership understandings (as I would expect him to claim except when he claims psyching), that seems to sustain the rule to assume misinformation rather than misbid absent evidence to the contrary.
Does BW favour taking the words of the
explainer against the words of the
bidder whenever there is a discrepancy? Incredible!