Fr. 43.50

Philosophy and Asian Martial Arts as Ways to Virtue

Inglese, Tedesco · Tascabile

Pubblicazione il 11.12.2025

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

Putting ancient Greek and East Asian philosophies into conversation, this book argues that learning a martial art can provide practitioners with a deeper understanding of the philosophical views that animate the cultures from which traditional martial arts have developed. In this respect, a martial art has more to offer than techniques for self-defense or exercises that promote power, strength, flexibility, and coordination. Martial arts training can develop more aspects of a person than the various skills related to handling specific attacks and a clearer feeling of how to deal generally with conflict. Against the view that martial arts promote fighting and vicious behavior, this book argues that training in the traditional martial arts builds character and leads to virtue. Martial arts training provides experiences which integrate mind and body provide a philosophically informed and sound way to cultivate virtue. Building on the author's three decades of Aikido practice, the book also includes exercises readers can use to integrate martial arts practice into philosophy courses.
About the Author:

Mark Stone is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Furman University (USA). He has practiced Aikido for over 30 years and currently holds the rank of
Rokudan
 (6
th
 degree black belt).

 

Sommario

Chapter 1. Introduction (martial arts, virtue, Plato, Eastern philosophy, Pragmatism).- Chapter 2--Martial arts in Platonic education (Laches, Republic, Laws, war, justice).- Chapter 3. Arjuna and the conflict of war in the Bhagavad Gītā (conflict, Arjuna, Indian philosophy, karma, mosksa).- Chapter 4--Confucian thought, virtues, and the martial arts (Confucius, family, ritual, filial piety, love of learning).- Chapter 5--Early Buddhist philosophy and its radical implications for the martial arts (suffering, impermanence, no-self, causation, Siddartha).- Chapter 6--Daoism and nature as a model for martial action and virtue (self-cultivation, dao, virtue, nature, yin and yang).- Chapter 7 -- Zen meditation and the martial arts (Buddhism, nonduality, realization, no-mind, enlightenment).- Chapter 8 – American pragmatism, Eastern philosophy and the martial arts (pragmatism, pluralism, experience, martial arts, comparative philosophy).

Info autore


Mark Stone is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Furman University (USA). He has practiced Aikido for over 30 years and currently holds the rank of
Rokudan
 (6
th
 degree black belt).

Riassunto

Putting ancient Greek and East Asian philosophies into conversation, this book argues that learning a martial art can provide practitioners with a deeper understanding of the philosophical views that animate the cultures from which traditional martial arts have developed. In this respect, a martial art has more to offer than techniques for self-defense or exercises that promote power, strength, flexibility, and coordination. Martial arts training can develop more aspects of a person than the various skills related to handling specific attacks and a clearer feeling of how to deal generally with conflict. Against the view that martial arts promote fighting and vicious behavior, this book argues that training in the traditional martial arts builds character and leads to virtue. Martial arts training provides experiences which integrate mind and body provide a philosophically informed and sound way to cultivate virtue. Building on the author's three decades of Aikido practice, the book also includes exercises readers can use to integrate martial arts practice into philosophy courses.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Mark Stone
Editore Springer International Publishing
 
Lingue Inglese, Tedesco
Formato Tascabile
Pubblicazione 11.12.2025
 
EAN 9783032147981
ISBN 978-3-032-14798-1
Illustrazioni Approx. 190 p. 32 illus., schwarz-weiss Illustrationen
Categorie Scienze umane, arte, musica > Filosofia

Populäre Kultur, Aikido, Asien, Kulturwissenschaften, Martial Arts, Popular Culture, Philosophy, philosophy of sport, Antike griechische und römische Philosophie, Asian Culture, World Philosophy, Ancient Philosophy / Classical Philosophy, Virtue Ethics, Asian Philosophy, Philosophy and Popular Culture

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