Postby Guest » Wed Mar 17, 2004 5:20 pm
Hi everybody!
It's been a while since I last posted, and I like this thread. I'd like to take the cinversation in a slightly different direction. I'm not sure I like the word "style" when it comes to fighting. The problem I have with it isn't so much semantics, however. As far as I'm concerned, there are only two kinds of fighting, either weaponed or unweaponed: there's good fighting, (that which is effective), and bad fighting, (that which is not). Good fighting is an art, to be sure, but it differs from other arts because fighting is NOT an aesthetic (despite what some hokey "masters" of the Eastern methods might claim). As has been said before on the forum, (and most aptly put, I might add), the human body can only move in so many ways. This means that there is a limit on what will be effective in any kind of combat, and as the scope is limited, any effective method of fighting will have many similarities others, at least superficially. This argument is supported by the number of times that I've shown Japanophiles the European manuals and they claim the images depicted are very similar to guards employed by Samurai, etc. As stated above, fighting is not an aesthetic; meaning it cannot be comapred to the visual arts, where preference is subjective. One might claim that Da Vinci's work is superior to Rapheal (sp?), but another will disagree. Likewise, one might claim Mozart is better than Beethoven, Shakespeare more insightful than Goethe, or whatever. This is the intelectual realm where the word "style" is most apt, I think. Fighting, by its very nature, cannot be thought of along these subjective lines. A method of fighting is either effective, and therefore "good," or superior to the ineffective, or "sportified" ones, or its ineffective, and therefore "bad."
I prefer the word method over style.