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Nathan Calvert wrote:The cultures mentioned if you look are pre-inca. Does it matter if it is a result of modern codification considering it comes from an ancient source. As for the catagoraztion of this as "secret martial arts" this is no different from Renaissance martial arts before assoniations like ARMA as for your quote about the Spanish conquest this is a question of the authors knowledge of history not culture.
The Inca were clearly a great civilization. But technologically they were still in the Stone Age! Stone weapons vs. steel weapons! Why are there accounts of the Spanish killing thousands in one day? Because the Spanish could and did and the Inca could not stop them! It is nice that Juan Flores has pride in his culture but that is not reason enough for me to accept something that is clearly untrue.
Please read Gene's article At the Edge of Accepted Knowledge in Western Martial Arts.
The martial arts we clearly recognize as arts add an abstract level of analysis to it, breaking down a collection of techniques into fundamental principles like footwork, timing, range, angles of attack, quadrants of the target, etc., all things which can be reassembled into new techniques by using logic.
LafayetteCCurtis wrote:Just thinking. I don't really get why the fact that Native American Empires crumbled under the feet of European invaders must imply that these cultures had "no martial arts." It's only necessary to posit that their martial arts was insufficient to defend them against Spanish invaders, especially if we use the most basic and most universal definition of "martial arts" as "systematized methods used in violent conflict with other human beings." After all, Aztec youths--both commoners and nobles--were conscripted into schools where one of the subjects taught was military skill; the nobles in particular had the dedicated calmecac schools where they probably would have learned the most advanced martial techniques and tactics known to the Aztecs of the day. Were there any similar institutions among the Incas, I wonder?
Maxime Chouinard wrote:Categorizing a "true art" in this case is, in my opinion, very subjective.
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