absolutely.
They are no harder to remember or perform under duress than any other aspect of a technique. However they must be engrained in the muscle memory to respond reflexively to an external stimulus, and be significantly Āhard wiredĀ to not be interrupted by an Āadrenal dump.Ā Like any other aspect of the physical sciences, proper repetition is the key under crisis like conditions.
Yes, usually. Styles were given Āfamily names,Ā usually after the patriarch ĀsifuĀ or teacher. Nevertheless, understand within the Chinese Sciences there is really only one style, but there are many different methods and emphasis of training, theoretically all leading to the same place.
Much like true martial sciences, the material is in the head of the knowledgeable to be passed to trusted students. It has always been this way and will continue to be this way. Even relatively simple ĀlocksĀ and ĀholdsĀ committed to paper are merely Āpicture booksĀ with very little text to describe what is actually taking place in the world of martial publications. True physical information can never be relayed through video, pictures, or writing. The writing, and/or visual images only serve as a ĀreminderĀ to jog the memory back to the teachers physicals lesson and its many subtle but important nuances.
The Chinese Methodologies were based on science and combat. The Japanese ĀdoĀ or ĀwayĀ arts concentrated on ĀhowĀ things were done and not necessarily the result. Practicality and combat effectiveness were secondary to Japanese ĀartisticĀ expression as dictated by the head of the Āstyle.Ā Thusly, the term Āmartial Art or martial sportĀ are more correct. The head of the art dictates what is and what is not correct, and of course, all art is interpretive.
Absolutely, but as much refinement took place, there was also lost a considerable amount of information. Minor movements and nuances not understood, could be ignored and lost. What may appear unnecessary to the unknowledgeable may make all the difference to the trained eye of a knowledgeable teacher. As the knowledge slipped away through nationalistic adaptation and misinterpretation of the information, the ĀartsĀ moved closer to its lowest common denominator of expression. ĀSport.Ā Here the emphasis is on muscle mass, speed and blunt force trauma induced Āpower.Ā
All nations eventually succumbed to this level for the masses. Korea has its TKD, Japan has its Karate-do, Ju-do, Aiki-do, ken-do, etc. These are all ĀwayĀ arts, not fighting arts. Even more recently, ĀAmerican Martial ArtsĀ is generally based on the premise of the Ākick and punchĀ of competition with black belts awarded for good ĀcompetitorsĀ called Āfighters.Ā In the early days of martial arts in America, people like Joe Lewis, Chuck Norris, and others brought abbreviated martial arts from the orient after military service. Most of them receiving black belts in Japan or Korea in stripped down Ākick & punchĀ arts in less than a year. This was the initial basis for all popular understandings of Āmartial artsĀ until the second wave of the Āgrappling crazeĀ went mainstream, and Ed Parker & Bruce Lee intimated there might be more from the Chinese Lineage over the Korean or Japanese Okinawan variety.
More recently some have taken to creating videos of stripped down version of arts for profit which are less than a shell of the true martial science. Unfortunately, some of these play on the nievetƩ of the American martial art wannabe's susceptability to the idea that you can learn anything by video. If it were that easy you wouldn't need sport coaches. And of course when some one is trying to kill you, the physical task at hand is infinitely more complex in it's possibilities and applications.
But I guess even these videos perform some kind of service, but people who get their black belts that way, don't advertise it when standing in a crowd of "real" students and teachers. If they did away with the belts awards, I would remove my objections. But then if you did that, nobody would buy them. Ya think?