Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I don't agree with art = esoteric.
Imo, art are the techniques and understanding / concepts that underpin those techniques.
The art may contain things that are no longer as relevant as when the art was conceived,
the art may contain fine motor skills that are not really available for sport or self defense,
the art may contain things that are flat out unusable for self defense (like information on assassination),
the art may contain things like dojo etiquette and ways of tying your belt which have nothing to do with self defense or sports,
the art may contain survival skills, medical information and other things.
<shrugs> I don't train for sport or art at all. We practice no technique or drill in my dojo that does not have an apparent practical use. I suppose the recitation of a dojo kun might be one of our few concessions to the art or personal development aspect of training.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'struggle for dominance' or 'stopping unlawful use of force' either. The skills we try to acquire and develop as we practice karate are morally neutral. Quite simply, their strict purpose is to be able to physically defeat (harm and control) another person or a small group of people. They can certainly be used for self-defense only, yet obviously someone could use them for nefarious reasons. I make no differentiation between struggling for dominance and self-defense. They are the same thing to me.
In competition, we struggle for dominance within a structure of rules. Both participants agree to the rules and both agree to engage.
In self defense, you have one party that DOES NOT want to engage and is attempting to ward off/evade/stop the use of force. This isn't a struggle for dominance, because "winning" may not actually accomplish the actual goal.
Does that make sense?
To me not really, but that is fine.
When the fists start flying, self-defense is just a nice way to describe harming your attacker to the point that his assault upon you ends. What degree of harm the attacker takes depends on the situation, but the fight itself is certainly a competition between your attacker and yourself to see who can defeat the other, even if the stakes are rather more than a trophy.