Hi Rich:
Good try at a definition, but there are a few holes in it.
First lets distinguish an 'art' from a 'science'. Science uses the scientific method: Observation, hypothesis, experimentation, and conclusion which produces consistant and predictable results. The beauty and strength of science is that it has
reproducible results. Science produces results that are consistant, predictable, and can be reproduced at will anywhere on the planet. Chemistry and physics are sciences, but not sociology, because sociology does not produce consistant and predictable results, sociology is an art.
(Political Science is not a science, it is misnamed, a
misnomer. The PoliSci people claim to be soon to be able to predict elections with scientific certainty, but haven't yet, and they presumptuously called their field political
science. Political Scientists are criticized for this in Universities).
Warfare is an art, not a science. Nobody can predict the outcome of a war. There is no formula for victory in warfare. The art of warfare takes a longer time to learn than the science of physics, because the outcome of a war cannot be predicted with absolute certainty (as in a science) but must be learned through experience, constant study, and achieving victory through a series of correct educated guesses, not by a pat formula. Martial means warlike or warfare.
The martial arts are not scientific. The martial arts cannot predict the victory of any combative encounter or fistfight. So the martial artist studies 'all' forms of combat. The martial arts are all forms of combat, whether boxing, jiu-jitsu, or dirty fighting in the school yard. Again, none of which can be predicted since little David unexpectedly slew big Goliath.
Now that a simple, but important, understanding of the martial arts have been established, Judo most definately falls in the realm of a martial art, an unpredictable combative or warlike practice.
The purpose of studying martial arts is to increase the likelihood of victory. Because it is not a science with a predictable outcome, the serious study of the martial arts, whether at the Kodokan or at West Point, will increase the probability of victory in your favor - but does not guarantee a victory.
There are several translations of 'jutsu' and 'do' from Japanese to English (like O.K. is translated several different ways). Jutsu can mean 'study of' and do can mean 'way of'. Jutsu means studying to hurt, kill, or maim; Do means studying to practice hurting, killing, or maiming without really doing it. Kenjutsu uses real swords, Kendo uses bamboo swords; ju-jitsu really breaks arms and legs, ju-do does not really break arms or legs.
The samurai class were being outlawed, along with their killer martial arts, in Dr. Kano's time of the Meiji Restoration (1868-1912). The Emporer's edicts forbade the samurai arts of ju-jitsu. So many ju-jitsu practitioners, including Jigoro Kano, obeyed the law by modifying ju-jitsu into something softer, for Jigoro Kano he developed ju-jitsu into the more humane ju-do. The martial arts were saved from extinction in Japan by their modification into 'do'! (Kendo; Aikido, Kyudo, etc.).
Ju-do is a martial art. Like a professional boxer wearing 32 ounce mitts can still knock you out, one can still defend themselves with the art of judo! But judo was rendered humane in comparison to ju-jutsu. And like jujutsu, judo was never practiced as a sport, not even in Japan. A method for these martial arts to prove their techniques under near combat conditions was necessary, and that method was called a
shiai.
A shiai is simply a method of testing your judo technique as close to actual combat conditions that the law allows. And that is it. Judo is not a sport and has never been one.
The western world, through the Olympics, is trying to twist and mangle judo from its Japanese and Taoist viewpoint into an empircal and predictable sport stripped of all its educational and metaphysical basis. The Olympics are hurting judo severely.
bignick said:
well...if we use the word bujutsu...which is often used as martial arts...first off..
jutsu - as far as i know is art, technique...this is of cours differentiated by -do which is way
bu - we'll just keep as martial
as for martial...judo was not developed with the purpose of warfare or the military in mind...
as for art - kano deliberately called it judo...not jujutsu...because judo was more than just a strict art or techniques of combat...it was a way of life...therefore juDO instead of juJUTSU
that being the strictest definition of bujutsu or martial arts...it's pretty easy to see judo is not a martial art...