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CalebChow wrote:I like how you put "only" after 40 years.
CalebChow wrote:Two criteria for "master" I think (purely speculation):
Either:
1) Other masters call you masters, via lineage of tradition.
2) You prove yourself beyond any doubt that you are a master. This kind of person would be the "master" that authenticates criteria number 1.
The catch about number 2 is that for martial arts in particular, proving yourself requires actual experience.
It doesn't count whether you've studied it for 40 years or whether your peers (who are not masters) think you're awesome; unless you have a proven record of actually using skills in numerous (as in, decades worth) of real situations, we cannot say for sure.
Asian martial arts maintain a lineage to some degree, with the original masters that have proven themselves on the field of battle authenticating other masters. Even if our members in ARMA can kick some of their tails, that doesn't make us a "master."
With our art not having any such lineage, the only way I think an ARMA member or whatever to legitimately attain an official title of "master" would be to have a person basically live exactly as the ancient masters did:
Real combat, real life-death situations, fighting, and winning. For decades.
With sword being militarily obsolete, I don't think we'll ever see any legitimate "master" of your art unless something crazy happens to worldwide society.
Jonathan_Kaplan wrote:... John Clements started studying historic fencing in 1980. If ARMA is around in 2020, would you guys then feel it was appropriate to hold a serious vote on whether or not to call him a Master?
Jonathan_Kaplan wrote:So I was reading an article about traditional martial arts, and apparently, in some older asian styles of martial arts, the term "master" was given to the particular leader of a school only after 40 years of training in the art, and only then by the person's peers.
So... in Renaissance Europe, how was the term "Master" bestowed to the masters of defense? Was it something similar, like the 40 year thing? If so, will ARMA ever (sometime in the future, I guess, after someone has been doing it for 40 years or whatever), ever have the title "master"? Or is that not going to happen? Are there previous discussions about this somewhere that I am missing? Thanks!
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