[115] You must know, you know, how to play chess, and as you see, you don't learn/kno w all the rules.
[116] And yet it is very hard to select the best move: you ought to understand why all ki nd did that.
[117] And so, in the same manner, only much worse.
[118] Is it in nature that we may be able to find all the rules?
[119] Actually, we do not have all the rule.
[120] We know that we don't have all the rules: every once in a while
[121] something like "castling" or something's going on, and we still don't understand.
[123] Yeah, but
[124] aside from that not knowing all the rules,
[125] what we really can explain in terms of those rules is very, very limited, [126] because in almost all situations like
[127] the man standing at the seashore,
[128] the situation is so enormously complicated that we cannot follow how everybody' s doing all the rules, and what's gonna happen next.
[129] But it must [be] so. I'm gonna-- limiting myself therefore, [130] to this more basic
[131] -uh-
[132] the rules, the question of the rules of the game which I'm going to try to describe [133] here.