Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Stacy Clifford wrote:Personally I distinguish "martial arts" as applying to the individual and "arts of war" applying to groups (very semantic I know). I define a martial art as a system of fighting based on underlying principles of motion (footwork, angles of attack, etc.) that would allow you to extrapolate moves that you haven't been taught based on those principles. The teaching of it is based around those core principles. If a fighting system is taught more as a potluck collection of useful tricks without a definable structure, then I would not consider it to be a martial art, just "a way of fighting," even though a lot of techniques might overlap. The structure defines the difference in my opinion.
Maxime Chouinard wrote:Yes it does. Although would you say that the core principles can be taught by other means than verbal teaching, by observation or by actual practice of specific exercices?
Andy Spalding wrote:I feel like the troubling word is ART.
Randall Pleasant wrote:Andy Spalding wrote:I feel like the troubling word is ART.
Below is a good article on what Art implied during the Renaissance.
http://salvatorfabris.com/WhatIsArt.shtml
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