Nigel Plum wrote:John_Clements wrote:As I wrote, historical role-play reenactment efforts quite often result in creating a certain bubble that encircles and strives to isolate a period or era out of the lager story of Western civilization as if to imagine it somehow existed complete on its own, rather than aspects of it having been absorbed, surpassed, or extinguished over generations. The arguable lack of emphasis on the Western Humanities within higher education nowadays only aggravates this. There is the need then to draw, as it were, a “larger circle” around things by making some generalizations about just what elements define the civilization of the “West.”
The issue being missed here is that martial arts were never practice in a cultural or moral vacuum. We cannot ignore this fact. Asian martial arts typically don't and I expect no less for ours.
If my editorial commemorating the 300 Spartans and linking their actions to a larger tradition to consider in perspective, then all the better.
JC
While I agree in an ideal world we would be able to fully take into account the cultural background of the material we study, we can't. We aren't them, our bodies are different & they are as alien to a guy from London or Miami as someone from Beijing, Mumbai or the Gaza strip. Further in fact as we can't get on a plane & visit them. Trying to understand their culture from records is about as effective as reading a tourist guide to France but not actually going there.
To put forth the premise that we can never hope to understand somewhat of the culture of our ancestors from the writings and societal constructs left by them would be a bit of a over-generalization I think. Certainly we can never hope to learn it all from a book , and even when we examine closely the other evidence such as period art, prevailing philosophies and societal structure of a given period, from and along with historical accounts -first hand and otherwise- we will fall in to some error.
We as thinking men realize the inherent limitations we face in our efforts to understand the past but to insist we can not learn about men who have gone before from the writings of their own hands is not reasonable in the absolute sense. Human bodies still have two hands, two arms, two legs and one brain and the fact that these arts we hope to recreate are only a few hundred to a thousand years old or so tells me that we aren't that different as physical organisms at our core. In the pursuit of our subject matter ,RMA, we must never give in by default to the concept that we can't come to know our ancestors or hope to step into their shoes in a contemplative and figurative sense as we work to re-construct what once was for the sake of that which now is.
We must work to push back the boundaries of our own ignorance and broaden and add depth to our understanding of the cultural and societal context of the RMA as a rule. Yet we must never allow the perfect to become the enemy of the possible. To imply that we cannot begin to understand the subject matter until we have first fully understood is not a tenable position.
This post is not in direct response to you Nigel, you just got me to thinking along these lines.

