Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
s_taillebois wrote:Found the Mike Loades video, interesting effect...
http://www.youtube.com/user/SergejKorol ... mJSE9VLv60
There may be some just concern about 'sportification' but that line is a bit fuzzy in regards to resurrecting western martial arts of the Renn, Baroque and Medieval. Since the intent is not to kill with these weapons it is a form of sport or art...it's more a matter of degree than being non kindred.
Greg Coffman wrote:There may be some just concern about 'sportification' but that line is a bit fuzzy in regards to resurrecting western martial arts of the Renn, Baroque and Medieval. Since the intent is not to kill with these weapons it is a form of sport or art...it's more a matter of degree than being non kindred.
See this article:
http://www.thearma.org/essays/MartialArtorCombatSport.htm
In ARMA we draw a sharp line between martial art and sport. What we do IS NOT a sport, sportitive, or anything like it. Sure, we are not getting into real fights with these weapons. But in the end, we are not learning/studying "sword fighting," we are learning Fighting, according to how the people in the Renaissance fought and with the tools (weapons) that they used. This is the Art of Close Combat at its zenith. We train and practice with these weapons just like somebody trains and practices by going to an indoor gun range to learn self-defense marksmanship. You don't have to shoot anybody to learn marksmanship, and that doesn't make it a sport. It can be turned into a sport easily (in either the case of shooting or sword fighting), and other groups do so. That is fine for them but not for us. The reconstruction of this art is still at its beginning. Muddying it with rules and competition would really get in the way of our purpose. In ARMA you compete against yourself. Getting *killed* in a fight is more about that you did something wrong than that your opponent did something right. It is far better for two opponents to come together, lock up, and then come apart without either landing substantial blows (as long as they demonstrated good technique and audacity), than for them to get double kills where they are both dead.
Jason Taylor wrote:But still, I wouldn't go so far as to say that any application of a tournament setting automatically makes what they're doing crap.
s_taillebois wrote:Over use of such words as 'kill', does imply a connection which may not be appropriate.
So yes we may be learning fighting, but at its core truth, we are learning a particular form of fighting...not living it or dying by it.
Greg Coffman wrote:Jason Taylor wrote:But still, I wouldn't go so far as to say that any application of a tournament setting automatically makes what they're doing crap.
I never said it was crap. I said it was extremely divergent from the goals of ARMA, and I was responding to this statement of the original poster, "i think this is ultimately our goal."
Yes, sparring is a drill. It's a tool. It simulates fighting to a degree that nothing else does. We don't really have rules in our sparring in ARMA. We have "guidlines" like: be safe, use control, wear proper safety equipment. We fight until somebody pulls of a technique that would in reality leave their opponent dead, wounded, incapacitated, or otherwise unable to continue the fight.
Return to “Research and Training Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||