Research on the Self-cultivation Thought of Chinese Wushu from the Perspective of Confucian Body View Qu Huilin, Ma Xuezhi
Chinese Wushu Academy, Beijing Sports University, Beijing 100084
Abstract
Abstract: The research uses the method of literature materials, expert interviews, and logical analysis, starting from the traditional Chinese body view, to sort out the history of the Confucian body view, and analyze the Confucian body view^s realistic concern for martial arts and the ideological connotation of martial arts self-cultivation. The realistic implication of martial arts self-cultivation thought. According to the research: 1. Wushu self-cultivation is the integration of shape, qi and heart. It is manifested as taking the individual as the embodied morality, and the cultivation as my body. From the natural blood and energy, through the relationship between martial arts self-cultivation, big and small, the circulation between inner qi and body qi is generated, and the cultivation of the integration of body, qi and heart is realized. realm. 2. The consciousness dimension of martial arts self-cultivation is to truly feel the existence of oneself in the self, a kind of body thinking. 3. Wushu Kungfu theory is the process experience of martial arts self-cultivation, and it is an embodied expression of metaphysical learning using the body as a carrier. It is manifested as a relaxed body in the repeated process, feeling the qi movement throughout the body, keeping the kung fu, and cultivating the xin xing. 4. The pursuit of the realm of martial arts self-cultivation is to take the acquisition process as the basis of the preconscious, that is, the stretching of the movement - the smooth flow of the air - the cultivation of the mind. Preconsciousness is the premise of expanding from the inside out, and this premise is the settlement from the outside to the inside. The iterative process of martial artist behavior and practice at the technical level.
Keywords: Confucian body view- martial arts- self-cultivation- relationship between body and mind- kung fu theory
Topic: Traditional sports and physical culture in Asia