While I do enjoy learning, researching and practicing boonhae (bunkai), it does rub me the wrong way how many from the "application clique" dis those who do not practice it or have any interest in it. There are many roads that lead to the same place.. .
May I ask who these people are sir? I've followed proponents of 'Bunkai' for many years now, such as Master Iain Abernethy, Stuart Anslow and Simon O'Neill. I've never seen them, or any other disrespect those of the block-punch-kick clique. I've seen them present quite a bit of information to support their position. For example, Professor Anko Itosu (Shuri) developed the Pinan kata set (Shodan through Godan). He did alter the terminology and application for the consumption of Okinawan school children. The reason presented was simply that children didn't need to know the more deadly applications of Karate. I agree. What he altered the Pinan kata to was basically a b-p-k application to be learned by rote. But this also means that if the terminology and applications were changed, they were originally something else as taught to adults. It is not a secret that Karate contains elements beyond strikes and kicks. Throwing, locking, cavity pressing etc have been an part of Karate from the time it was developed (Te). Indeed, stories of Itosu Sensei joint locking an attacker abound. Funakoshi Sensei (Itosu Sensei's student) has written about the Pinan/Heian katas and the applications they contain beyond the b-p-k.
Kanbun Uechi Sensei developed his art outside of the other Ryu's in Okinawa (Shuri, Naha, Tomari and the subsequent Wado, Shoto, Shudo, Shito etc). Yet his art contained the same or similar applications in the Seisan and Sanseiryu katas. The point is that there is a common theme.
The advent of arts becoming more focused on sporting applications has in some ways moved away from these applications. I'm not indicating this is right or wrong, good or bad. But I do see a trend in the last few decades from some quarters to equate forms training = boring and useless. This is regrettable. Reading the writings of the different arts founders would strongly indicate that forms training, when properly understood, was the foundation upon which the art was built. Indeed, Kanbun Uechi Sensei stated that to
know Karate, one had to intimately
know Sanseiryu. Rather than learning a form in a couple of months (or a couple of classes), Uechi Sensei took 10 years to learn and develop just three kata that lasted him a lifetime. Myogi Sensei often taught only two katas to his students and felt a lifetime was not enough to truly know the two! The point is that the fathers and seniors of Karate felt very strongly about kata for a reason.
Translate this to Korean forms, many of which are Okinawan kata that have been renamed. Of the Korean developed forms, all of the elements can be traced back to what is in Okinawan forms. Again, this isn't stated to say anything against Korean forms, and should not be taken in that light. The point is that if applications beyond b-p-k exist within Okinawan kata, they will also exist within Korean forms. Whether it was knowingly place there or not isn't the question.
What this means is that an instructor or student can further their martial education, if they desire, into a new direction. TKD for example, is known for being a striking and kicking art. That's fine. But many proponents, including me, function with the stance that TKD can...and does have all the elements of arts such as Hapkido, Aikijujutsu, Chin Na etc. TKD can, and in my opinion does have locks, throws, balance displacement, cavity pressing, misplacing of the bone and tendon etc. That is the TKD that I have learned over these many years. Does this put down the TKD'ist that only wishes to train in a b-p-k venue? No. But if one wishes to train their TKD in a 'alternate or deeper' application venue then I think they should be encouraged.