At the risk of sounding an anti tradition troll ill reply , In the spirit that hopefully people will realise this is an exercise in thought

, I also apologise If I`m hijacking the thread a little , Ill repost elsewere if youd prefer
Quote
"What else does the Martial Arts impart..."
My answer is: control, humility,respect, the ability to guage your response from a level-headed standpoint and not be a bragging jock-head who just wants to prove how tough he/she is.
*Hmm well maybe , I know lots of egotistical big headed karateka , Ive seen about as much control , humility , respect in most of the activities Ive been involved in , Boxing and Kick boxng , now if you were to train In those arts you better not be disrespectful to the senoirs in the gym .......
Quote
"What would be ineffective about your skills if you just learnt the techniques?"
This is the dream of every magazine- and- method reader: 5-minute techniques to bring any assailant down.
Stryke, YOU know this is fantasy...because you train. You know that techniques aren't enough.
You need the will, spirit and guts to really apply them, test them, refine them until they are something you can rely on.
Where/when is a person going to do that?
In the Dojo you get to face some pressure to see just how "killer" those techniques really are...not.
So if you just learn technique, I'm saying you miss the complete reality dimension.
*Ahh i`m not against training , just the need for the traditional spin , we can refine techniques In inovative ways , dispense with rigidity , bowing , old drills that people get little from , and old Bunkais that just boggle the mind ...... dispense with belts gis etc and just rely on ourselves and a little research .
Quote
...The mechanics of power...etc.
You state that this can be pursued through Kata...isn't that tradition?
Kata is more than science, it's the encyclopedia of your style, because it's like a living CD-ROM which suddenly explodes to life on the Dojo floor as your teacher performs a centuries-old portrayal of how the techniques are brought to life...
I think of Kata like freeze-dried coffee.If you don't add the water (you), then it's just lifeless data.
There is a TRADITION of preserving TECHNIQUE via DEMONSTRATION.
And how about the SPIRIT of how those techniques are performed?
There's a lot of SOUL in the SCIENCE of a good Kata!
*As in my first post ...
I think the only thing that should be sacred is the kata , they should contain the essence of the style , everything else , ranks , traditions , drills , Bunkai etc should be free to evolve
agree totally with you about kata , I just question all the mysticisim and packaging that goes with it .
Quote
I think this applies not only to opening your mind to new knowledge, but also pouring out the EGO to make room for compassion, humility and respect for others.
You must have seen countless students who dropped out because they met their crossroads when their Kata fell apart while the class was watching, or they came to a personal hurdle because they couldn't help a classmate without becoming a bully, or couldn't become part of the group...a class has a life of its own...
*Exactly my point , how many drop out .... , how come karate couldnt help them perfect there character ? , did it fail them ? , or did they lack something to begin with ? , maybe they just preferred tennis

, maybe those that dont drop out have a tendancy to think towards tradition , or beleive there getting something out of it they could find anywhere else ...
quote.....
"The ultimate aim of the art of karate lies not in victory or defeat,
but in the perfection of the character of it's participants"
Master Gichin Funakoshi
end..........
I dont disagree with the sentaments , just where abouts this is learnt through the traditional trappings of karate , this is the same man that said
War is a tool God gave Man to organize the world.
how attitudes can change ........
The Japanese are no more spiritualy aware or characterly superior to anyone else , this is the same nation that comitted the rape of Nanking , and the atrocities they wont even acknowledge from WW2 ...
Quote
All the tradition, "hoki rituals and grading sytems and esoteric babblings" are what kept the arts alive all these years. Otherwise we would or wouldn't be training in a boxing gym today? Most likely wouldn't be. I bet?
*I tend to beleive martial arts originally was a lot like a boxing gym they went to learn how to fight and improve , the packaging came later .....
As for it being good for popularity , this agree with , A lot of it isnt quite as old as we`d beleive though , I know that Shotokan for example in its current form Is not more than a generation or two old at the most .
Quote
If it were not for the tradition we would not have all the 'older seniors' around still today, would we? Karate participants range in ages up into their 60's-80's sometimes and hopefully older. How many 60- 80 year old kick boxers or boxers do you know?
this is all about what we want from training , good exercise for old folk and children yes , good sense of comraderie and the ability to learn from these folks , yes , this is definately a benifit and a positive of tradition . Much like Tai Chi etc , health benifits perhaps ....
ANYWAY BEFORE I UPSET EVERYONE
I hope I havent gone to far , i know peoples beleifs are a very sensitive subject and i mean no offence , These arent necessarily my concrete beleifs , i appreciate styles and systems , just some of the questions Ive looked into in the process of understanding my system , I learn by tearing things apart . I know i`m going to have to agree to disagree on this one , and even consider hitting SUBMIT
Stryke