{"id":3719,"date":"2014-12-15T02:00:40","date_gmt":"2014-12-15T07:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/?p=3719"},"modified":"2014-12-15T19:09:22","modified_gmt":"2014-12-16T00:09:22","slug":"review-of-new-book-research-of-martial-arts-by-jonathan-bluesteing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/2014\/12\/review-of-new-book-research-of-martial-arts-by-jonathan-bluesteing\/","title":{"rendered":"Review of New Book “Research of Martial Arts” by Jonathan Bluestein"},"content":{"rendered":"

Synopsis<\/span>:\u00a0 <\/em><\/strong>Jonathan Bluestein’s new book Research of Martial Arts<\/em><\/span> is an ambitious book that discusses many important and difficult topics in more details than most martial arts books.\u00a0 In particular, it discusses and compares the external approach to martial arts (also known as external martial arts) and the internal approach to martial arts (also known as internal martial arts).\u00a0 It discusses various martial arts from the health perspective, physiological perspective, philosophical perspective, and the combat perspective.\u00a0 Of course for such an ambitious book, what Jonathan wrote is not necessarily the final word on the subject, but it is definitely a significant contribution to stimulate additional discussion on these important topics.\u00a0 To his credit, I believe that Jonathan also agrees with the previous statement, as he wrote in his Introduction:\u00a0 “This book was written to promote understanding – of martial arts, life and other human beings.\u00a0 It is through understanding that we grow.\u00a0 Still, it is only natural that many of you will have disagreements with some parts of my book, or with my personal opinions, and I wholeheartedly accept this reality.\u00a0 …”<\/p>\n

Nevertheless, I think many people will learn some valuable information from this 418-page book.<\/p>\n

About the book author<\/span>:\u00a0 <\/strong>Jonathan Bluestein is a martial arts teacher and author from Israel who has studied a variety of martial arts.\u00a0 He is the founder of Tianjin Martial Arts Academy in Israel where he teaches the traditional Chinese martial arts Xing Yi Quan and Pigua Zhang.
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I start this review by discussing several topics discussed in the book that different people may find certain parts to be informative.\u00a0 A very important but complex topic is the differences between an external approach to martial art (also known as external martial arts) and an internal approach to martial art (also known as internal martial arts).\u00a0 An external approach has a tendency to rely on strong muscular contractions and toughened body parts.\u00a0 They use training methods such as weightlifting, hitting immobile and semi-mobile objects, jabbing and slamming the fingers into water, marbles, beans, stone, sand and all sorts of materials to improve finger hitting strength and the fingers’ capacity to remain stable when hitting, and using dynamic tension exercises.\u00a0 The externalist also likes to divide the training into segmented exercises, such as training of the muscles, tendons, or of the hands, feet, shoulders, hips, elbows, knees, etc.\u00a0 The externalist also focuses much more on the combat aspect, and usually neglects the long-term health aspect.\u00a0 An internal approach takes a holistic approach of training all (or most of) the components together as a whole.\u00a0 It also focuses as much on the health aspect (both short-term and long-term) as on the combat aspect, because the internal approach is very much related to Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).\u00a0 The internal approach also emphasizes more on deflecting (or resolving) the opponent’s attacking force (four ounces can deflect a thousand pounds), then followed by counter attacking, and relies more on the yi (or intention of the mind) to relax the mind and the whole body to control and direct the body’s response.<\/p>\n

Of course, a martial art is not necessarily purely based on an external approach or an internal approach.\u00a0 As a matter of fact, many external martial arts masters, especially when they reach a high level of their arts, will often train in both approaches or exhibit traits of both approaches.\u00a0 That is why Jonathan has a 10-page chapter on combining external and internal.<\/p>\n

The book in the section “The Muscles, Tendons and Fasciae” on pages 103-104 provides a good explanation of the physiology of relaxation and generation of more force, and the important role of the relaxation of the mind.\u00a0 I want to recall two quotes:<\/p>\n