Chris Holloman wrote: So then, should we stop playing the prize? That can be viewed as a sport or tournament since we keep score and determine if someone wins...or are we just validating or proving their skill?
Hi Chris! Prize playings are quite different from tournaments, they serve a different purpose, they are about the prizer demostrating he has developed skills physically and emotionally and about his companions recognizing them by testing him but it is not about the fighters that go against the prizer or the scoreboard, quite different from who's the best of the pool of fighters in a given scenario with given rules...
Chris Holloman wrote: A tournament can be viewed as nothing more than a free play exercise or it can be viewed as a sport event that one is trying to win.
I disagree, freeplay has a "free" word in it for some reasons, freeplay is training tool. However tournaments have artifitial rules, and this changes the nature on how you approach the subject...
If you agree all tournaments by default have artificial rules and you are not interested about winning said tournament (by the way the objective is winning in a tournament), what is the benefit of you participating in it that you cannot equal or best in freeplay?
Chris Holloman wrote: I disagree with the presupposition that anyone who participates in a tournament is not pursuing the martial teachings of the masters of defense.
How can you pursue a martial teaching when you are bounded to follow artificial rules? Does any of the Master of Defense used in their teachings for fighting artificial rules, like the area for fighting that you can not step out or you are disqualified = dead?
Chris Holloman wrote: If the principles of this art are true and we have learned these principles, then we should be able to implement them in most any circumstance. Having the opportunity to try them out against others who are also pursing the same martial art should be something we jump at...literally,
Inaccurate, you (and the opposing fighter) are constraining the principles of the art to match the rules of the tournament... There is no art above the rules of the tournaments... We have not finished reconstructing the art, how can we constrain something we have yet to finished to understand, and validate it by restraining it?
Chris Holloman wrote: Or we can hunker down in Fort-ARMA and say we are the only ones doing it right and we are really better fighters than everyone but the only way to show it is if you join us... if we do that, do we not just become irrelevant? I hope we will share what we know with all those who are pursing the historic masters and put our skills on display.
Winning tournaments that are restraining an "under-construction" martial arts makes you relevant? explain how? to whom? Tournaments are self serving enterprises, they are about having a winner under a set of rules... what does this have to fighting arts and reconstructing a martial art?
Chris Holloman wrote: I hope we will share what we know with all those who are pursing the historic masters and put our skills on display.
???...We share tons of information on this websites, we make demonstrations with setplays and freeplays, seminars, videos, photos etc, we publish research, we debate, we interact with the academia, we serve as consultants to interested parties, we promote MARE...
I have no problem with tournaments or people participating in them as long as I/we understand the place they take in relation to reconstructing and practicing a martial art...