[QUOTE=Corwyn;764704]Not even going to try to understand THIS one:rolleyes:
Seriously! Have you heard of Newton?[/quote]
Have you heard of colors other than cyan? I’m asking that you not reply anymore in that color. It’s hard to read.
His 3rd law - which has been around now for about 400 years!? states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. This is why if you try to push off a boat near the pier you often end up face first in the water, or why a gun has a recoil, or why you have to have firm stances when you punch. So lets JUST indulge your fantasy for a moment and claim that chi this - how did you put it - energies categorized in mysticism exist mostly at a higher vibration than things like solid matter and electromagnetic energy:rolleyes: exists. AND people can control and use it.
It isn’t necessary to put the roll eyes emoticon in. I already understand your viewpoint.
Lets further assume that this energy doesn’t obey the laws of physics (they don’t make a smiley face STUPID enough for this notions) how is it that human bodies are able to counter the laws of physics when using these powers?
First off, do you understand that the laws of physics have been in a regular state of expansion after a deeper understanding of the relationship between matter and energy?
If you do then, we move on to the next thing: apparent laws of physics disobeying.
Take this example: How does a plane fly? Why can it get off the ground? It weights a crap load, no matter the type. The answer is because of using propulsions: propellar, jet engine, etc. It circumvents the law of gravity to make it fly = using one law or a series of laws against another or another series of laws. The laws of physics, the ones you are refering to with cause and effect, deals with a classifcation of energies that are of 4 types. Qi is not a part of these 4, so a further clarification with this one in mind would expand on the laws of physics, which is the relationship between matter and energy.
Also, which laws are you saying it doesn’t obey? There are some that it does. It has mass, so it does move slower than light, but it doesn’t have to follow a linear path, so it can seem to move faster than light when it doesn’t. This is another example of one law being used against another to circumvent a problematic scenario.
In the video, the victim flies back and flops all over the place yet the practitioner doesn’t suffer any recoil at all!
Mythbuster did a nice show showing this when they did the myth of the gunshot victim in movies flying backwards when getting shot.
Part of the teachings include projecting energy into the ground to refrain from being moved. This is one example of how. Another is that it isn’t so much as brute forcing the opponent’s body around, but sending energy to specific locations in the body, which cause reactions, like convulsions, which can make the body flip around. Convulsions are uncontrollable muscle contractions and expansions. The body instictively moves away from sources it doesn’t like, such as yanking your hand away when you touch a burning hot pan.
They move away, with some of their body uncontrollably convulsing, but their legs can also be subject to the convulsions, so they act much like a fish just out of water.
I saw the episode with the gunshots and how the old movies without the special effects got it right. But, just because you project Qi, it doesn’t mean that there is a continuous line between the projected Qi and your body, which would allow the transference of kinetic energy to pass back through that line to the projector. It’d be no different than someone taking a rock and throwing it at someone’s head: The one hit would get rocked around, falling, but the thrower doesn’t have any recoil experience.
Next?