Postby s_taillebois » Sun Aug 14, 2005 12:30 pm
True, and it will be fortunate if most can keep away from that particular will.
The problem is that, the 'will to fight', can get people into a fight or battle...doesn't mean they'll survive it or win. That's often more a matter of thinking, training and placement.
The samurai ethic, a good example, the pilots of the late ww-2 Japanese Naval Service, certainly possessed the will. And cannot fault their courage. But tactically it was misplaced, and most lacked tactics/training, so either suicide attacks (which didn't stop the US/Brits fleet) or cannon fodder for pilots who did want to live to see home. The best pilots of that war, could be argued to have been the German's/US. They did value individual initiative, but emphasized group stratagies...sort of a 'composite' will to fight, which negated it's lesser links.
The same could be said of the french knights at agincourt...the courage and combative attitude were there, but under misplaced conditions.
So your right about the combative attitudes, but mayhaps it needs to be moderated by other virtues (Cunning, Wisdom, and such) to be effective. Good historical examples would be the Byzantines. They held out agaisnt a very inspired enemy (the Saracens/Turks/etc), for a very long time. Largely by combining combative 'will' with the moderating aspects of strategies intended to co-opt the others 'inspiration' or to 'make them die for their faith'....to try to ensure the Byzantines didn't.
The Crusader states, often had problems with people who were too happy for combat, and constantly provoked battles at the wrong time or place. (Raynald De Chantillon., being a prime example, and the Knights/Doge who attacked Constantanople). Outremer might have lasted longer if it had taken the Byzantine approach, fight when necessary, but use other methods to achieve the same end when possible.
The English LongBows, a fearsome weapon...but only of value if individual combative spontaneity, was subordinated to a group coordination (which in part was premised on staying together, so they could get home...). The longbow died as a effective weapons system, when the English monarchy used them too aggressively, and too many died. Why practice at the butts on Sunday, when you have no expectation of surviving it all? And so despite royal decree, they didn't practice.
Could hold that in fencing a similar approach could be applicable...let the active agent expend himself in misplaced attacks, ward it all, and when the moment comes...dispasionately nail them. Nothing new, Mushashi sometimes advocated that approach, and the Brits/Italians seemed to have a similar inclination to balance defense with attack. The German style, more overtly offensive...but wonder if that has preconditioned our training/thinking, as many of the dominant extant manuals are German/Tuetonic.
Steven Taillebois