There IS a difference in internal vs external methods, and to the extent that those methods are practices... a difference in internal vs external martial arts.
Rather than generalizing, I'll toss out one (of several) differences:
1. Pre-programmed reflexive action vs Full Conscious Thought.
If you are practicing rote drills to build speed and 'muscle memory' so that you can REACT to a stimulus with a series of prescribed actions... you are likely to be practicing an EXTERNAL method.
Internal arts will develop consciousness / awareness through sensitivity drills and body method exercises, where the RESPONSE will be somewhat more extemporaneous, yet within the principles of the style.
Generally, the EXTERNAL fighter using a SEE-DO is intially faster and more effective that the INTERNAL counterpart using a SEE-THINK-DO... but in time the internal fighter will reduce the gaps between SEE & THINK and between THINK & DO, and use this to his advantage. Being able to change quickly to multiple stimulii while the external fighter is stuck in a gap of consciousness carrying out an extended series of reflexive actions.
This is why Meditation, Qigong, and Sensitivity drills (Push Hands, Rou Shou, etc) are integral parts of the INTERAL arts, while Repitition, Conditioning, and Hand Speed are characteristic of EXTERNAL methods.
This is ONE... there are MORE... let's see where this discussion takes us.
Pete
I may regret this but I have eliminated my ignore list today so lets us actually see where this discussion does takes us.
No one is saying, or at least I am not saying, that there is not a difference in training between say Taijiquan and Chanqquan or a difference between training Taijiquan and Xingyiquan or a difference between training Chen style Taijiquan and Yang Taijiquan, or Wing Chun and Tong Bei or White crane and Hung ga, there is a difference. However just about all CMA styles have some sort of Qigong and Sensitivity Drills (Tuishou – push hands) even Modern Police/Military Sanda has Tuishou (but not Qigong). I am not sure however how you are defining meditation as it applies to this, to me when talking CMA meditation falls under Qigong.
The quote….
Everything should have its internal and external elements. Beginners should start with the external. After many years of practice, one can then delve deeper into the art and gradually obtain the inner essence. To learn Taijiquan is the same as learning other martial arts. Both have internal and external and also always start with external before
progressing to internal
…is saying, at least to me, that all CMA styles have internal and external and that all CMA styles start with external training and that the division is not all that important.
However the terminology internal external is newer than some of the styles we now called internal and external styles. The terminology did not exist when Yue Fei was around, the legendary creator of Xingyiquan and a lot of other arts and those claims are very much in question so that really doesn’t matter. But the terminology did not exist when the first documented use of Xingyiquan appeared as done by Ji Jike and it was not around when Chen Wangting came up with Chen style either. It was not around when many styles we now call “external” came into existence either but some of those appeared prior to Xingyiquan and Taijiquan so one could argue there was no need for the labels I suppose. Internal and external first appear in 1669 with the Epitaph for Wang Zhengnan (Note: Zhang Sanfeng appears before that but the references do not agree as to the dates and it is not in relation to taiji but in the Epitaph he is associated with an internal style and again not taijiquan)
I am however saying that I feel the separation into external styles and internal styles is not as important as many make it and it originated in a political statement against the rulers of China at the time, who were, the Qing. I am saying that Chen Wangting and Ji Jike likely did not say they were teaching or training an internal style. Likely they were teaching/training what they called Wushu or Chen Taijiquan and Xingyiquan. I am also saying that many, not all, hide behind the term “Internal” in order to make up for lack of training, give themselves a false sense of security and to give them a sense of superiority over other styles that have been labeled as external, but then this is not only found in “internal” styles either.
I guess I could also so say that, IMO, just because someone “properly” trains an “internal” style does not automatically make them any better a fighter or martial artist than someone that “properly” trains an “external” style. And that the label internal/external is just that a label for categorization nothing more. Yes Xingyiquan, Baguazhang, Taijiquan and likely Yiquan/Dachengquan are all labeled internal. However I am not sure if Wang Xiangzhai would have labeled it so and I doubt that Ji Jike or Chen Wangting would have labeled their styles as such either. I do not think that calling something “internal” makes it any better or worse than a style labeled “external” and when they first appeared on the scene they were likely not labeled internal at all.
To your “SEE-DO” “SEE-THINK-DO” I am not sure I fully agree with the terminology in application since I feel the idea of training all CMA styles is to make it automatic (pre-programmed) but it could, IMO, I suppose be applied to training but then I would think that it would then also be necessary to “see-think-do” in the early stages of any CMA training be it internal or external and the later stages in application I guess could be “see-do” but again, to me, that would apply to both internal and external. I might say that an external style is more likely to react to what it sees where an internal style is more likely to react to what it feels. But this is just my opinion of what you are saying and I am not trying to argue the point at all. However I did say something that might be considered similar or at least speaks to the differences in training in another post about Xingyi and Taiji which was along the lines of Xingyi is more attack/defend where taiji is more defend/attack. Also I have been told as well as read that “internal” styles go from internal to external and “external” styles go form external to internal too. However my experience has been the internals that I train have gone external to internal but then that is me and not everyone will be the same. I recently read an article about Yiquan that was interesting that separated this into external styles training depending on muscle fibers that are ‘fast twitch fiber’ while internal trains to use ‘slow twitch fibers’. The article also talked about ‘internal’ styles depending more on core muscle groups. I felt it was interesting enough to look into further so I am.
However I do agree that training Taijiquan is different than training something like Changquan that is for sure but they are all, in Chinese, Wushu and they all have Nei Jia and Wei Jia but I am willing to say that some may train more Nie Jia than others and some may train more Wei Jia than others but they are all effective and being “internal” does not make it better. And even though the labels internal and external are not as ancient as many believe they are used in the west and likely will go on being used. And looking back over what I just wrote the label sure does make it easier to discuss.
But I just find it interesting when I find quotes from past Taiji masters that say things like this
Everything should have its internal and external elements. Beginners should start with the external. After many years of practice, one can then delve deeper into the art and gradually obtain the inner essence. To learn Taijiquan is the same as learning other martial arts. Both have internal and external and also always start with external before
progressing to internal