China Culture
Chinese Martial Arts
Martial Ethics
Martial Ethics |
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Chinese Wushu embodies a profound philosophy and a sense of human life and social values (some people therefore call it "philosophic Chuan"). It emphasizes traditions, experience and rational knowledge, all of which are clearly reflected in the martial ethics of Wushu. That's why it can display the oriental civilization via combat skills and become an inexhaustible treasury of the human body culture. As a form of social ideology, morality differs in different historical periods. It is the summation of the code of conduct of a given society for the adjustment of the relationships between man and man and between man and the society. Generally speaking, it evaluates man's behavior and adjusts each other's relations with such conceptions as the good and the evil, justice and injustice, fairness and partiality, and honesty and dishonesty. Wushu is a system of skills and theories the Chinese people have developed through their struggle with nature and in the course of their social life, for combat and to promote health and improve one's temperament. Combat in the usual sense means violence, bloodshed and death. For this very reason, few of the various combative techniques and skills in the world are combined with morals. On the contrary, Wushu has been influenced ever since its birth by moral principles and has developed a complete code of moral behavior. Martial ethics, formed in such a Chinese cultural environment, has become a distinct feature of Wushu and is an essential part of the study and understanding of Chinese martial arts. The main points of the martial ethics are
Respect for Human Life
Emphasis on Moral Principles
Emphasis on Moral Conduct and Manners
Respect for the Teacher and Care for Each Other
Modesty and Eagerness
Freedom from Personal Grudges
Persistance and Perseverance Trackback(0)
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