47MartialMan
Master of Arts
It is defined as many things. What is your definition and opinion?
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What exactly are you asking? Are you asking what people practice Taiji for?47MartialMan said:It is defined as many things. What is your definition and opinion?
Yes, or Taiji Quan.7starmantis said:What exactly are you asking? Are you asking what people practice Taiji for?
7sm
Instead of phishing around for other thoughts & definitions... how about expounding on yours.47MartialMan said:That was interesting. Although I have my own understanding of it. I am looking for more from others. Keep 'em coming.
Very interesting. Great postSailor said:I see it as a martial art based on the principles of the grand ultimate, more commomly know as Yin and Yang.
An example whould be that the monkey, tiger, dragon etc. is a style based on the movements and actions of those animals. Tai Chi Ch'uan is based on the actions of the grand ultimate...movements flowing into one another, one action yielding into another etc..
So are you going to follow suit and answer your own question?47MartialMan said:Very interesting. Great post
So enlighten us & quit the BS ... answer the question directly. All you do is ask rhetorical, circular questions... answer something straight for once...47MartialMan said:The name Taijiquan can be directly translated quite easily. It means Supreme (or Grand) Ultimate Fist. Simple, no? Well, actually, this causes quite a lot of confusion. I have lost count of the number of times IÂ’ve come across people having the direct translation correct, but falling into the trap of not quite grasping what it means. ItÂ’s fairly easy to do.
At first glance, the name Supreme Ultimate Fist can appear to be boastful. It is easy to think that it is the equivalent to calling a style “Best Fighting Style Ever.” I’ve seen otherwise apparently knowledgeable people use this to justify statements proclaiming Taijiquan’s superiority, on the basis that no-one would call a style “Best Fighting Style Ever” if it weren’t true. This is rather naive.
You remind me of someone else. You didn't even post your definition/opinion. Instead, you went on a "head-hunting" crusade. IMHO, you were trolling or looking for conflict. I thought I gave some info of my view. What is it that of my post, you don't understand? You want more?-hope you can understand;clfsean said:So enlighten us & quit the BS ... answer the question directly. All you do is ask rhetorical, circular questions... answer something straight for once...
The key thing to remember here is that “Supreme Ultimate” refers to a Daoist principle. The principle is that of the yin/yang duality of all nature. In Daoist philosophy, this is the guiding, foundation principle upon which everything rests. The style of Taijiquan is named for this principle, as it is the central principle upon which the style of fighting is based.[b said:Sailor[/b]]Originally Posted by Sailor
I see it as a martial art based on the principles of the grand ultimate, more commomly know as Yin and Yang....An example whould be that the monkey, tiger, dragon etc. is a style based on the movements and actions of those animals. Tai Chi Ch'uan is based on the actions of the grand ultimate...movements flowing into one another, one action yielding into another etc......
I was looking for other opinions....where is yours?7starmantis said:So are you going to follow suit and answer your own question?
7sm
47MartialMan said:I thought I gave some info of my view. What is it that of my post, you don't understand? You want more?
My starting of this thread was:Dronak said:About all you said before was that people misunderstand the literal translation of taijiquan. That's not exactly unexpected. I can understand clfsean's post asking you to post a more straight answer than that.
I can't actually speak for 7starmantis, but I would guess he's waiting for you to answer the question first.