As I understand it Dan Millman was a gymnast back in the day (did he ever explicitly study martial arts?) but many of his writings are attributed to martial arts philosophy. I read Way of the Peaceful Warrior and Journeys of Socrates just to get a feel for the guy, as a few of my MA friends regard him as a sort of MA guru.
From what I saw, his novels are semi-biographical that have been heavily loaded with new age cliches. Peaceful Warrior wasn't a bad story or movie in its own right but I have my doubts about how much of it is fact and how much fiction. Journeys of Socrates was better written as a novel but required more suspension of disbelief on my part. I could see some of the broader existential concepts expressed and illustrated by the characters' experiences in the stories. Probably if you have a heavily existentialist world view these books would be most appealing to you.
However, I still fail to see how Millman has had such a heavy connection to martial arts philosophy if he has no verifiable martial arts background!
Anybody else read Millman or even seen the Peaceful Warrior film -- your thoughts?
From what I saw, his novels are semi-biographical that have been heavily loaded with new age cliches. Peaceful Warrior wasn't a bad story or movie in its own right but I have my doubts about how much of it is fact and how much fiction. Journeys of Socrates was better written as a novel but required more suspension of disbelief on my part. I could see some of the broader existential concepts expressed and illustrated by the characters' experiences in the stories. Probably if you have a heavily existentialist world view these books would be most appealing to you.
However, I still fail to see how Millman has had such a heavy connection to martial arts philosophy if he has no verifiable martial arts background!
Anybody else read Millman or even seen the Peaceful Warrior film -- your thoughts?