the historical masters speak of deflecting and/or stifling with the edges much more often. What does that tell us?
That these were unusual situations.
Litterature utilizing expensive writing materials and labour-intensive production methods did not ordinarily waste resources on the mundane. Our age of cheap printing has radically altered the way that we in "modern" times look at written material. Technical publications the the philosophy behind them are a relatively modern invention. In these type of lengthy discussions it's easy and natural to overlook this out of ignorance. This is not to call anybody bad; it's just something that we modern people don't know about unless it's been brought to our attention.
Nowdays it's easy to say, "well, if one is to do X instead of Y, why didn't they spell it out in black and white?" I challenge anybody to grab a quill, temper it, cut it, and start writing. I used to teach mediaeval calligraphy and will happily give instructions on how to do this. It's quite easy.
I can attest to the astounding amount of mental and physical effort it takes to copy a page, let alone a book. As was commonly said, "two fingers hold the pen, but the whole body toils." No, it's not an exercize of strength, but it is an exercise of stamina.
I'll give a prize to anybody who can copy several pages of text (not a whole book) without error. Even with my training I will frequently make a mistake on a page. Single-letter errors make you mad, but when you realize you skipped an entire line... ARGH! It's much easier than you may think, and did happen during transcriptions from time to time.
Heck, take a modern pen and paper and copy an entire manual by hand. That alone should be education enough.
Even with the advent of printing, it was still expensive. However, the modern ideas of technical writing hadn't come forth during the Renaissance. Those books are
much better than during the mediaeval period, but from a modern perspective they still are found lacking.
I don't have my copy in front of me, but in Talhoffer's 1467 manual
FYI the T1467 messer section is on-line:
http://www.schielhau.org/talmesser.html --- very handy. I went to grab my physical copy, but it's in the car that my wife just drove off with.
It is possible your opponent will notice this and bind with his blow against yours instead, this is shown with ensuing follow-ups. This seqence does result in the swords meeting edge to edge, often rather harshly.
Assuming you're speaking of the transition from plate 223 to 230 (the fourth play), this statement is pure interpretation, not a hard fact. From my practice I don't agree. My practice shows this to be a very acute (low-angle) edge-on-edge or edge-on-flat impact in my experience. I would have to see how you perform this -- I'm assuming that you've tried this personally.
Then again, people are dancing around so much I'm not sure what point anybody is trying to make anymore. I don't see ARMA people here running around saying "Thou shalt never allow edges to meet in any way, shape, or form." That's nuts. When edge contact happens, it is at acute angles that allow the blades to slide. Yes, small nicks will occur at speed. This should not be confused with the edge blocking and bashing practiced by other WMA groups.
My observation of this monster thread is that it's hampered by isolation. The problem with debating in a forum like this is that we can't compare notes face-to-face. It'd be nice to have access to video of people explaining their theses. That would help the discussion tremendously.
I have a feeling that were we meeting in person there would be a lot of "Oh, that's what you meant? Huh. That's what I was saying, too. Kind of hard to get it across by typing." If we have so much difficulty communicating in a state-of-the-art electronic medium....
Anyhow, I resisted saying anything until now. I got to get back to stuff and can't really get dragged into this much. I don't know what the point is anymore. This all assumes that the fire simply isn't being fed by trolls or some other annoyance. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />