gano_b,
Sorry, animals do and can choose whether or not to fight in many instances. i.e., Many of rutting interactions are based initially on display and then on contact. Often, an animal is free to choose not to fight and to flee, even after fighting or mock fighting begins. Animals can function as individuals, and many do have options in behavior apart from instinct. There are learned behaviors. There is use of tools. There is love and learned nurturing. There is grief. There is thought, though not the language development of man.
We are animals, biologically and in mental foundation, like it or not. To deny this or separate from it is not something I would want to do. There appears to be a real difference between man and his animal relations in terms of the development of language, at least according to something I am in the process of reading. It’s dense stuff. Not just actual talking and grammar, but the kind of mental equipment for different kinds of memory, etc., which are necessary to provide for the development of language. I can’t pursue this further now. Don’t know enough.
To walk away from a challenge to one’s ego is the mature thing to do. Some of the training is for necessary fighting, but some should be for other things, which have I spoken about previously. I would rather say that one reason to train is not to cause unnecessary damage. similar, but not the same. I don’t understand where you get your statistic of 99%. I see that you wish to avoid violence and agree that is best. We are what we are.
grounded,
I think that having something to prove is a function of personality and group dynamics and doesn’t necessarily have to do with the particular art studied. I can see what you mean in terms of a younger art trying to build a heritage of success. I hadn’t thought of that.
I think that martial arts have many levels, one of which is the blood and teeth section. A fist to the muzzle, a chop at the carotid. That is part of training too. Whether the punch is from an internal or external practitioner is of no consequence. A punch is a punch.
Though there is a place for this, I am not much into fight records. First off, knowing me, I’d have to check out each and every one and I really don’t want to do that. heck with it. The no holds barred events aren’t for everyone. I don’t watch them. I think of it as an outlet. Not everyone needs that or is up to it. Some who are capable don’t want to. Refusal is an option. Why not?
Challenge is part of martial arts history. I think this is something difficult to deal with because people might feel that what they study and who they are, the validity of both, and the integrity of both, are being harshly questioned unnecessarily by people who just want to rumble. It is important to exercise the option not to do so without implying anything other than personal preference. I guess, some of this comes down to equating insistence of proving yourself or your art with the old lines re proving one’s love in girl-guy things. In going against your nature to accomodate the egotistical needs of another, you lose even if you appear to win. I speak of respect and personal standards of behavior.
I think martial arts are precious because they provide a way for us to be better than we ever thought we could be.
You take pride in what you are a part of, the tradition, it’s history, and it’s future and that is something important.
and Lyle,
While scientific evidence might not go far or be necessary for appreciation of the arts, there is indeed some work proving how wonderful the arts are, and that they can improve quality of life. I know this has been done to help the elderly to regain balance and experience less frailty. It’s not exactly what we are talking about around here, but the research results can be extended to expectations that younger people can improve their lives.
Cody