KeithFarrell wrote:That sounds like steps 1 and 4 of my set of tests: matching against the sources, and matching in sparring against a non-cooperative opponent. Do you believe cutting tests or other destruction tests carry any weight for deciding if an interpretation or application of a technique is valid and meaningful?
In general, yes, although we probably don't approach it in exactly the same manner you do. As a general rule, all cuts must follow one of the lines of the
segno, and all cuts on the
segno can be made with either edge, and we make it a point in our core curriculum to practice cutting all lines with either edge using the appropriate body mechanics to generate speed, power, and proper edge alignment. Since any interpretation of a technique in a manual should result in one or more of these cuts that we've practiced (if not a thrust), then the necessary mechanics you describe are already incorporated and therefore accounted for as part of the interpretation. That doesn't exempt us from trying things in test cutting, which we certainly do, but with sufficient experience you should be able to tell if something would have done damage even without a sharp. That experience can only be built by actual cutting, however, and incorporating sound, proven mechanics in our curriculum from the beginning. In essence I think we are both assuming the same requirements for a good interpretation, you are just spelling out cutting as a more explicit and separate test at a different stage of the interpretation process. By and large, the philosophy your article describes is very comparable to the one ARMA has always followed. My compliments on a well-written article.