viernes, 22 de marzo de 2019

CONÓCETE A TI MISMO: MENTE, CUERPO Y ÉTICA. EL TIRO CON ARCO JAPONÉS (KYUDO) Y LA FILOSOFÍA DE GILLES DELEUZE





Diana Soeiro
New University of Lisbon. Faculty of Social and Human Sciences

https://www.ifilnova.pt/en/pages/diana-soeiro


Publicado en: Enrahonar. Quaderns de Filosofia 47, 2011 199-210




Este artículo pretende describir el problema mente/cuerpo desde el punto de vista de la filosofía oriental y más específicamente desde el Kyudo, el arte marcial japonés del tiro con arco, y en segundo lugar a partir del filósofo occidental Gilles Deleuze.

La ética, en la filosofía occidental, trata de la forma cómo tomamos decisiones y cómo actuamos a partir de estas. Decisiones y acciones se analizan desde la racionalidad y la intuición, pero rara vez desde la racionalidad e intuición propias del cuerpo —que el Kyudo ejercita—. Podemos encontrar en la filosofía de Deleuze conceptos importantes para entender mejor esto: la diferencia, la repetición, el caos, la identidad, la energía, la fuerza, el escenario y las micropercepciones.

¿En qué medida el enfoque dominante en el pensamiento oriental sobre el tema mente/cuerpo podría ser eficaz para cumplir con el aforismo griego clásico «conócete a ti mismo» (γνθι σεαυτν), inscrito en el Templo de Apolo en Delfos?






 Know thyself: Mind, body and ethics.Japanese archery (Kyudo) and the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze

This article aims to describe the mind/ body problem from an Eastern philosophy point of view addressing firstly Kyudo, the Japanese martial art of archery; and secondly the Western philosopher Gilles Deleuze.

Ethics is, in Western philosophy, what deals with the way we take decisions and act upon them. Decisions and actions consider rationality and intuition but seldom the body’s own rationality and intuition —which Kyudo exercises. We can find in Deleuze’s philosophy important concepts to better understand this: difference, repetition, chaos, identity, energy, force, stage and micro-perceptions.


To what extent can the dominant Eastern thought approach on the mind/ body topic be effective to fulfill the Ancient Greek aphorism «Know yourself» (γνθι σεαυτν) inscribed in the Temple of Apollo at Delphi?


1. What is Kyudo, the Art of Japanese Archery?

Asking «what is kyudo» while writing on a piece of paper is one of the less kyudo-like things one can do. Kyudo is about doing and not about talking about it. The best way to understand what kyudo is, is to find a place where it is taught and start practicing and observe others to practice.

Still, in this article we will aim at not only describing kyudo, but also at trying to understand what kyudo is confronting its principles with what in Western culture translates as Ethics. How can kyudo knowledge enrich our Ethics concept?
In the West, there is a dominant cultural tradition that separates mind and body activity. Though it has existed before, this separation was conceptualized first by Descartes (1596-1650) and since then many have attempted ways to explain the mind/ body relation and how do they interact. But those attempts have always considered a way to do so either rationally or by offering a neu­rophysiologic-based explanation. What do we mean here by «rationally» is «not using the body». This may still seem obscure but we hope we will clarify it. The point is that kyudo offers a third way to solve the mind/ body separa­tion: the Way of the bow.


The Japanese affix the suffix «do» to the names of the Zen arts. It translates into Chinese as «Tao». In English, its translation has no direct equivalent but it usually translates as «Way» connoting path or road to spiritual awakening. «The Zen arts can be referred to as «Ways» and are not limited to the martial arts: kyudo is the Way of the bow; kendo is the Way of the sword; karate-do is the Way of the empty fist; shodo is the Way of writing («spiritual» calligraphy); and chado is the Way of the tea (tea ceremony)».

A «Way» in its essence is therefore best described in action. Moreover, «actions become Ways when practice is not done merely for the immediate result».2 This means that action, in this context, should be taken as gesture. This distinction is crucial to understand that what is at stake in the practice in any of the «Ways» is not the result but the act of doing itself. It’s about the body as something able to perform a gesture, in such a way that that ges­ture, with time and through repetition, appears as action. In order to sim­plify the understanding of this passage (from gesture to action) we give an example.

Awa Kenzo (1880-1939) is known for having been one of the great kyudo masters. He was the one teaching the German professor of Philosophy in Tokyo, Eugen Herrigel (1884-1955), the first Westerner to be taught kyudo, also responsible for writing on kyudo for the first time (Zen in the Art of Archery, 1936), offering Westerners the possibility of getting in touch with this martial art.

It is told that «Kenzo once had the students gather in a garden to demon­strate that a kiai (ki concentration) did not have to be a loud shout to be effective. A makiwara3 was set up. Kenzo held a sword. He took a deep breath, raised the sword, and in a flash split the very thick bundle in two (...)» hardly making any noise. Then one of his students, after a new makiwara was set up, gave it a try. «The sword bounced off the makiwara, barely making a dent in it».4 The gesture of raising the sword and then lower it as surely as possible, that is what is practiced and repeated having as main focus «what can be learned». One can learn the gesture but one can never learn its result —and that is why in kyudo hitting the target or not is irrelevant. Teaching the body a specific gesture (or a sequence of gestures) through persistence, humbleness, and bravery, by repeating it over and over is what can be learned (and therefore known). The body’s physical limits and resistance to learn, and the ability to overcome them through practice, is what the body teaches the mind. Kyudo is therefore a method that orients both mind and body through a simultaneous learning process. One does not progress without the other.

Each gesture is progressively perfected in order to become an action and that happens when mind and body are leveled, synchronized. We are not born know­ing how to act. It is something that has to be learned through gesture. And gesture is educated and exercised through the body. When Kenzo slices the straw bun­dle in two or when he (frequently) hits the target with his arrow the result is not measured by the feeling «I hit it» but from the feeling «I know». In kyudo the body is therefore NOT dismissed of the act of knowing.



We have briefly described the passage form gesture to action but what hap­pens when action happens? Let us focus most of all on this way of putting it: action happens. Gesture is something that is done, conventioned, performed but action itself happens. In a very specific sense we can take it as something caused by chance. But let us not forget, that in this situation chance is not an effect of randomness, but instead something instilled by repetition, promoted by a method, and enabled by a progressive process, in short, kyudo




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El ZKCB agradece a Diana Soreiro la autorización para reproducir el artículo.






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