Gil Kalai, a well known mathematician, has this to say on the topic of chess and luck:
http://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2009/07/05/chess-can-be-a-game-of-luck/
I didn't follow his argument at all, but it seems like something other LW posters may understand, so I decided to post it here. Do comment on his arguments if you agree or disagree with him.
Yes, indeed i am talking about selection bias for players as stakes change. When the stakes are higher if players are rational then the selection bias will lead to them to have similar skills, and this means the game turning more into a game of luck, unless.. some players without adequete skills are playing just by gambling effect, and this also pushes the game into a game of luck ---of a different nature
Well, as someone else has noted here, this still doesn't correspond to our usual meanings of skill and luck. I mean, I'm equally likely to beat or lose to you in a game of Candyland, and Federer and Nadal are (very roughly) equally likely to win at tennis, but the two situations aren't equivalent, since you could replace me with your 4-year-old niece at Candyland and have the same probabilities, but not so much with the tennis example. This is why most of us call Candyland a game of luck and tennis a game of skill (with a small amount of luck involved); ... (read more)