barmar, on 2013-February-15, 12:35, said:
That's because you're thinking of it wrong. They don't have general principles, and then systems that fit the principles are allowed. Instead, they decided which systems and conventions they wanted to allow (Precision, Jacoby 2NT, Drury are OK, Multi isn't) and then crafted the GCC in a way that it would allow what they wanted, without actually naming them (so the specific biases aren't overt).
Well, yes, but I believe it was the other way around.
Years ago, there were real convention charts, A to F, and they had conventions on them. And if you played them (the only way they were played, of course), you could, in events that included that chart or higher. (Now Justice) Amalya Kearse's
Bridge Conventions Complete was exactly that, back then - if you could play it (in the ACBL), it was in Kearse's book, explained well enough to actually play it. Kind of fun, really.
But nobody played conventions exactly the same way, and they would keep on inventing new ones. So the ACBL moved to "you can play conventional X calls that say Y" charts, and made sure that the regular tournament games (that became GCC) could play all the stuff you could play at the old level (I believe it was Class C). So, of course, you can see that "we want to allow Romex Dynamic NT, and Precision 2
♣ and 2
♦, and Drury, and ..." in the GCC, to this day; you can also see that they want to be able to say "we don't like this kind of call".
Add 30 years of massaging (and after about 25 of them, they realized they had to update their "if you don't have a convention card, you're limited to Class A conventions..." spiel at every Nationals) you get the current GCC.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)