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This book clarifies and makes accessible critical aspects of the art that are currently understood and manifested by only a small number of high-level practitioners. Numerous step-by-step experiments are provided for readers to experience and perfect these critical tai chi aspects. This interdisciplinary book utilizes elementary physics, physiology, anatomy, psychology, and spirituality. It contains detailed analyses and explanations for achieving internal, expansive strength, known as nei jin, and for attaining optimal timing and natural movement.
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This book clarifies and makes accessible critical aspects of the art that are currently understood and manifested by only a small number of high-level practitioners. Numerous step-by-step experiments are provided for readers to experience and perfect these critical tai chi aspects. This interdisciplinary book utilizes elementary physics, physiology, anatomy, psychology, and spirituality. It contains detailed analyses and explanations for achieving internal, expansive strength, known as nei jin, and for attaining optimal timing and natural movement.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Martial Science
- Verlag: YMAA Publication Center
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 366g
- ISBN-13: 9781594397417
- ISBN-10: 1594397414
- Artikelnr.: 59641884
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Martial Science
- Verlag: YMAA Publication Center
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 366g
- ISBN-13: 9781594397417
- ISBN-10: 1594397414
- Artikelnr.: 59641884
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Robert Chuckrow, Ph.D. (experimental physics NYU) has been practicing tai chi since 1970. He is certified as a master teacher of Kinetic Awareness® and has authored six books, notably The Tai Chi Book (YMAA, 1998). Dr. Chuckrow has studied tai chi, chi kung (qigong), and other movement and healing arts under masters such as Cheng Man-ch’ing, William C. C. Chen, Elaine Summers, Alice Holtman, Harvey I. Sober, Kevin Harrington, and Chin Fan-siong. Robert Chuckrow teaches and resides in Ossington, New York.
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Author’s Background
Author’s Note
Introduction
CHAPTER 1: Relax
1. Cheng Man-ch’ing
2. Yang Cheng-fu
3. The Meaning of Relax
4. Attaining Sung
5. The Importance of Releasing Tension in Doing T’ai Chi Movement
6. Push-Hands
7. A Seeming Contradiction
8. Shedding Some Light on the No-Strength Paradox
CHAPTER 2: Expansive Strength
1. Background
2. The Current View of Muscular Action
3. Differences Between Contractive and Expansive Strength
4. Some Experiential Evidence for Expansive Strength (Experiments You
Can Do)
5. A Promising Mechanism for Expansive Strength
CHAPTER 3: Swimming on Land
1. Professor Cheng’s Advice
2. My Initial Skepticism
3. My Eventual Realization
4. The Mental Aspect
5. “Zombie-Style T’ai Chi”
6. Swimming on Land is Only a Tool for Recognizing Chin
CHAPTER 4: Elucidation of Famous Masters’ Sayings on Strength
1. Li, Chin, and Nei Chin
2. Ch’i, Breath, and Internal and External Strength
3. An Analysis of Cheng Man-ch’ing’s Distinction Between Two Different
Types of Strength
4. An Attempt to Further Elucidate What Professor Cheng Wrote
5. An Analysis of Yang Cheng-fu’sCommentary on Strength
6. Breath and the Tan T’ien
7. Health Aspects
8. Martial Aspects
9. Mind, Breath, Ch’i, and Strength
10. Summary
CHAPTER 5: Advantages of Expansion Over Contraction in T’ai Chi
1. Briskness of Regulation of Strength Compared for Both Types of
Strength
2. Alertness
3. Endurance and Health Benefits
4. Leverage and Fine-Motor Control
5. Developing Bodily Unification
6. Educating Bioelectrical Pathways
7. Deception in Self-Defense
CHAPTER 6: Health Protocols Using Expansion
1. Expansion for Reeducating Upper-Back Alignment
2. Expansion for Reeducating the Lower Back
3. Improving the Cervical Spine Using Slow, Relaxed Movement
4. Expansion for Relieving Plantar Fasciitis
CHAPTER 7: Balance
1. Gravity
2. Leg Strength and Mobility
3. Finding the Centers of the Feet
4. Knee, Ankle, Arch Alignment
5. Center of Mass
6. Balance Experiments
7. Vision
8. Other Factors
CHAPTER 8: An Analysis of “Rooting and Redirecting”
1. Conditions for Optimal Stability
2. Internal Aspects
CHAPTER 9: Natural Movement
1. Understanding Natural Movement
2. Elements of Natural Movement
3. Independence of Movement
4. Reasons for Studying Natural Movement
5. Examples of Unnatural Movement
6. Tools for Studying Natural Movement
7. Some Basic Physics Concepts
8. Animate and Inanimate Natural Movement
CHAPTER 10: Stepping Like a Cat
1. T’ai-Chi Stepping
2. Yinand Yang
3. Weight Transfer
4. Difficulties in Stepping Like a Cat
5. Order of Stepping: Heel First, Toe First, or Whole Foot?
6. Practicing Stepping to the Side Using a Movement From the T’ai-Chi
Form
7. Stepping Naturally
8. The Swing of the Rear Leg During Stepping Forward
9. The Swing of the Forward Leg During Stepping Forward
10. Stepping at the Right Moment
11. Experiments for Attaining Proper Stepping
12. Swing of the Arms During Walking
CHAPTER 11: Periodic Movement and Timing
1. Periodic Motion
2. Periodic Motion Terms
3. Driven Periodic Motion
4. Linear, Driven, Horizontal Periodic Motion (“Withdraw and Push”)
5. Analysis of the Motion in “Withdraw and Push”
6. Importance of Timing of “Withdraw and Push”
7. Circular Motion of Right Arm in “Single Whip”
8. Centrifugal Effect
9. Centrifugal Effect with Gravity
10. Conical Pendulum
11. “Swinging” About a Vertical Axis, Arms Swinging Side-to-Side
12. Benefits of “Swinging”
13. Fa Chin
14. T’i Fang
CHAPTER 12: Additional Physical Concepts
1. Constraints
2. Rolling Without Slipping
CHAPTER 13: A Clarification of “Secret” Teachings Revealed by Cheng
Man-ch’ing
1. Basic Concepts
2. Neutralizing
3. Attacking
4. Yearning K. Chen ‘s Alternative Way of Deflecting an Attack
5. In Conclusion
CHAPTER 14: Non-Intention, Intention, and “a Hand is Not a Hand”
1. Non-Intention
2. The Mental Transmission of Intention
3. “A Hand is Not a Hand”
4. The Transmission of Intention Over a Distance
CHAPTER 15: Maximizing Your Progress in T’ai Chi
1. Studying T’ai-Chi
2. Obstacles to Learning T’ai-Chi
3. Dealing with Obstacles
4. Dangers of Overusing Images in Movement Arts
5. Validating Your Progress
CHAPTER 16: Perspectives on T’ai Chi
1. Internal Versus External Martial Arts
2. Lifting Versus Lowering
3. Empty / Full, Yin/ YangParadox
4. Some Variations of the T’ai-Chi Symbol
5. T’ai Chi “Weapons”
6. Misinterpretations
7. The Yang Long Form and Professor Cheng’s Short Form
8. The Popularization of T’ai Chi
Afterword
Appendix 1. Basics of Vector Addition
Appendix 2. Analysis of Forces in Rooting
Appendix 3. Analysis of Swing of Hanging Rods
About the Author
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Author’s Background
Author’s Note
Introduction
CHAPTER 1: Relax
1. Cheng Man-ch’ing
2. Yang Cheng-fu
3. The Meaning of Relax
4. Attaining Sung
5. The Importance of Releasing Tension in Doing T’ai Chi Movement
6. Push-Hands
7. A Seeming Contradiction
8. Shedding Some Light on the No-Strength Paradox
CHAPTER 2: Expansive Strength
1. Background
2. The Current View of Muscular Action
3. Differences Between Contractive and Expansive Strength
4. Some Experiential Evidence for Expansive Strength (Experiments You
Can Do)
5. A Promising Mechanism for Expansive Strength
CHAPTER 3: Swimming on Land
1. Professor Cheng’s Advice
2. My Initial Skepticism
3. My Eventual Realization
4. The Mental Aspect
5. “Zombie-Style T’ai Chi”
6. Swimming on Land is Only a Tool for Recognizing Chin
CHAPTER 4: Elucidation of Famous Masters’ Sayings on Strength
1. Li, Chin, and Nei Chin
2. Ch’i, Breath, and Internal and External Strength
3. An Analysis of Cheng Man-ch’ing’s Distinction Between Two Different
Types of Strength
4. An Attempt to Further Elucidate What Professor Cheng Wrote
5. An Analysis of Yang Cheng-fu’sCommentary on Strength
6. Breath and the Tan T’ien
7. Health Aspects
8. Martial Aspects
9. Mind, Breath, Ch’i, and Strength
10. Summary
CHAPTER 5: Advantages of Expansion Over Contraction in T’ai Chi
1. Briskness of Regulation of Strength Compared for Both Types of
Strength
2. Alertness
3. Endurance and Health Benefits
4. Leverage and Fine-Motor Control
5. Developing Bodily Unification
6. Educating Bioelectrical Pathways
7. Deception in Self-Defense
CHAPTER 6: Health Protocols Using Expansion
1. Expansion for Reeducating Upper-Back Alignment
2. Expansion for Reeducating the Lower Back
3. Improving the Cervical Spine Using Slow, Relaxed Movement
4. Expansion for Relieving Plantar Fasciitis
CHAPTER 7: Balance
1. Gravity
2. Leg Strength and Mobility
3. Finding the Centers of the Feet
4. Knee, Ankle, Arch Alignment
5. Center of Mass
6. Balance Experiments
7. Vision
8. Other Factors
CHAPTER 8: An Analysis of “Rooting and Redirecting”
1. Conditions for Optimal Stability
2. Internal Aspects
CHAPTER 9: Natural Movement
1. Understanding Natural Movement
2. Elements of Natural Movement
3. Independence of Movement
4. Reasons for Studying Natural Movement
5. Examples of Unnatural Movement
6. Tools for Studying Natural Movement
7. Some Basic Physics Concepts
8. Animate and Inanimate Natural Movement
CHAPTER 10: Stepping Like a Cat
1. T’ai-Chi Stepping
2. Yinand Yang
3. Weight Transfer
4. Difficulties in Stepping Like a Cat
5. Order of Stepping: Heel First, Toe First, or Whole Foot?
6. Practicing Stepping to the Side Using a Movement From the T’ai-Chi
Form
7. Stepping Naturally
8. The Swing of the Rear Leg During Stepping Forward
9. The Swing of the Forward Leg During Stepping Forward
10. Stepping at the Right Moment
11. Experiments for Attaining Proper Stepping
12. Swing of the Arms During Walking
CHAPTER 11: Periodic Movement and Timing
1. Periodic Motion
2. Periodic Motion Terms
3. Driven Periodic Motion
4. Linear, Driven, Horizontal Periodic Motion (“Withdraw and Push”)
5. Analysis of the Motion in “Withdraw and Push”
6. Importance of Timing of “Withdraw and Push”
7. Circular Motion of Right Arm in “Single Whip”
8. Centrifugal Effect
9. Centrifugal Effect with Gravity
10. Conical Pendulum
11. “Swinging” About a Vertical Axis, Arms Swinging Side-to-Side
12. Benefits of “Swinging”
13. Fa Chin
14. T’i Fang
CHAPTER 12: Additional Physical Concepts
1. Constraints
2. Rolling Without Slipping
CHAPTER 13: A Clarification of “Secret” Teachings Revealed by Cheng
Man-ch’ing
1. Basic Concepts
2. Neutralizing
3. Attacking
4. Yearning K. Chen ‘s Alternative Way of Deflecting an Attack
5. In Conclusion
CHAPTER 14: Non-Intention, Intention, and “a Hand is Not a Hand”
1. Non-Intention
2. The Mental Transmission of Intention
3. “A Hand is Not a Hand”
4. The Transmission of Intention Over a Distance
CHAPTER 15: Maximizing Your Progress in T’ai Chi
1. Studying T’ai-Chi
2. Obstacles to Learning T’ai-Chi
3. Dealing with Obstacles
4. Dangers of Overusing Images in Movement Arts
5. Validating Your Progress
CHAPTER 16: Perspectives on T’ai Chi
1. Internal Versus External Martial Arts
2. Lifting Versus Lowering
3. Empty / Full, Yin/ YangParadox
4. Some Variations of the T’ai-Chi Symbol
5. T’ai Chi “Weapons”
6. Misinterpretations
7. The Yang Long Form and Professor Cheng’s Short Form
8. The Popularization of T’ai Chi
Afterword
Appendix 1. Basics of Vector Addition
Appendix 2. Analysis of Forces in Rooting
Appendix 3. Analysis of Swing of Hanging Rods
About the Author
Bibliography
Index
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Author’s Background
Author’s Note
Introduction
CHAPTER 1: Relax
1. Cheng Man-ch’ing
2. Yang Cheng-fu
3. The Meaning of Relax
4. Attaining Sung
5. The Importance of Releasing Tension in Doing T’ai Chi Movement
6. Push-Hands
7. A Seeming Contradiction
8. Shedding Some Light on the No-Strength Paradox
CHAPTER 2: Expansive Strength
1. Background
2. The Current View of Muscular Action
3. Differences Between Contractive and Expansive Strength
4. Some Experiential Evidence for Expansive Strength (Experiments You
Can Do)
5. A Promising Mechanism for Expansive Strength
CHAPTER 3: Swimming on Land
1. Professor Cheng’s Advice
2. My Initial Skepticism
3. My Eventual Realization
4. The Mental Aspect
5. “Zombie-Style T’ai Chi”
6. Swimming on Land is Only a Tool for Recognizing Chin
CHAPTER 4: Elucidation of Famous Masters’ Sayings on Strength
1. Li, Chin, and Nei Chin
2. Ch’i, Breath, and Internal and External Strength
3. An Analysis of Cheng Man-ch’ing’s Distinction Between Two Different
Types of Strength
4. An Attempt to Further Elucidate What Professor Cheng Wrote
5. An Analysis of Yang Cheng-fu’sCommentary on Strength
6. Breath and the Tan T’ien
7. Health Aspects
8. Martial Aspects
9. Mind, Breath, Ch’i, and Strength
10. Summary
CHAPTER 5: Advantages of Expansion Over Contraction in T’ai Chi
1. Briskness of Regulation of Strength Compared for Both Types of
Strength
2. Alertness
3. Endurance and Health Benefits
4. Leverage and Fine-Motor Control
5. Developing Bodily Unification
6. Educating Bioelectrical Pathways
7. Deception in Self-Defense
CHAPTER 6: Health Protocols Using Expansion
1. Expansion for Reeducating Upper-Back Alignment
2. Expansion for Reeducating the Lower Back
3. Improving the Cervical Spine Using Slow, Relaxed Movement
4. Expansion for Relieving Plantar Fasciitis
CHAPTER 7: Balance
1. Gravity
2. Leg Strength and Mobility
3. Finding the Centers of the Feet
4. Knee, Ankle, Arch Alignment
5. Center of Mass
6. Balance Experiments
7. Vision
8. Other Factors
CHAPTER 8: An Analysis of “Rooting and Redirecting”
1. Conditions for Optimal Stability
2. Internal Aspects
CHAPTER 9: Natural Movement
1. Understanding Natural Movement
2. Elements of Natural Movement
3. Independence of Movement
4. Reasons for Studying Natural Movement
5. Examples of Unnatural Movement
6. Tools for Studying Natural Movement
7. Some Basic Physics Concepts
8. Animate and Inanimate Natural Movement
CHAPTER 10: Stepping Like a Cat
1. T’ai-Chi Stepping
2. Yinand Yang
3. Weight Transfer
4. Difficulties in Stepping Like a Cat
5. Order of Stepping: Heel First, Toe First, or Whole Foot?
6. Practicing Stepping to the Side Using a Movement From the T’ai-Chi
Form
7. Stepping Naturally
8. The Swing of the Rear Leg During Stepping Forward
9. The Swing of the Forward Leg During Stepping Forward
10. Stepping at the Right Moment
11. Experiments for Attaining Proper Stepping
12. Swing of the Arms During Walking
CHAPTER 11: Periodic Movement and Timing
1. Periodic Motion
2. Periodic Motion Terms
3. Driven Periodic Motion
4. Linear, Driven, Horizontal Periodic Motion (“Withdraw and Push”)
5. Analysis of the Motion in “Withdraw and Push”
6. Importance of Timing of “Withdraw and Push”
7. Circular Motion of Right Arm in “Single Whip”
8. Centrifugal Effect
9. Centrifugal Effect with Gravity
10. Conical Pendulum
11. “Swinging” About a Vertical Axis, Arms Swinging Side-to-Side
12. Benefits of “Swinging”
13. Fa Chin
14. T’i Fang
CHAPTER 12: Additional Physical Concepts
1. Constraints
2. Rolling Without Slipping
CHAPTER 13: A Clarification of “Secret” Teachings Revealed by Cheng
Man-ch’ing
1. Basic Concepts
2. Neutralizing
3. Attacking
4. Yearning K. Chen ‘s Alternative Way of Deflecting an Attack
5. In Conclusion
CHAPTER 14: Non-Intention, Intention, and “a Hand is Not a Hand”
1. Non-Intention
2. The Mental Transmission of Intention
3. “A Hand is Not a Hand”
4. The Transmission of Intention Over a Distance
CHAPTER 15: Maximizing Your Progress in T’ai Chi
1. Studying T’ai-Chi
2. Obstacles to Learning T’ai-Chi
3. Dealing with Obstacles
4. Dangers of Overusing Images in Movement Arts
5. Validating Your Progress
CHAPTER 16: Perspectives on T’ai Chi
1. Internal Versus External Martial Arts
2. Lifting Versus Lowering
3. Empty / Full, Yin/ YangParadox
4. Some Variations of the T’ai-Chi Symbol
5. T’ai Chi “Weapons”
6. Misinterpretations
7. The Yang Long Form and Professor Cheng’s Short Form
8. The Popularization of T’ai Chi
Afterword
Appendix 1. Basics of Vector Addition
Appendix 2. Analysis of Forces in Rooting
Appendix 3. Analysis of Swing of Hanging Rods
About the Author
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Author’s Background
Author’s Note
Introduction
CHAPTER 1: Relax
1. Cheng Man-ch’ing
2. Yang Cheng-fu
3. The Meaning of Relax
4. Attaining Sung
5. The Importance of Releasing Tension in Doing T’ai Chi Movement
6. Push-Hands
7. A Seeming Contradiction
8. Shedding Some Light on the No-Strength Paradox
CHAPTER 2: Expansive Strength
1. Background
2. The Current View of Muscular Action
3. Differences Between Contractive and Expansive Strength
4. Some Experiential Evidence for Expansive Strength (Experiments You
Can Do)
5. A Promising Mechanism for Expansive Strength
CHAPTER 3: Swimming on Land
1. Professor Cheng’s Advice
2. My Initial Skepticism
3. My Eventual Realization
4. The Mental Aspect
5. “Zombie-Style T’ai Chi”
6. Swimming on Land is Only a Tool for Recognizing Chin
CHAPTER 4: Elucidation of Famous Masters’ Sayings on Strength
1. Li, Chin, and Nei Chin
2. Ch’i, Breath, and Internal and External Strength
3. An Analysis of Cheng Man-ch’ing’s Distinction Between Two Different
Types of Strength
4. An Attempt to Further Elucidate What Professor Cheng Wrote
5. An Analysis of Yang Cheng-fu’sCommentary on Strength
6. Breath and the Tan T’ien
7. Health Aspects
8. Martial Aspects
9. Mind, Breath, Ch’i, and Strength
10. Summary
CHAPTER 5: Advantages of Expansion Over Contraction in T’ai Chi
1. Briskness of Regulation of Strength Compared for Both Types of
Strength
2. Alertness
3. Endurance and Health Benefits
4. Leverage and Fine-Motor Control
5. Developing Bodily Unification
6. Educating Bioelectrical Pathways
7. Deception in Self-Defense
CHAPTER 6: Health Protocols Using Expansion
1. Expansion for Reeducating Upper-Back Alignment
2. Expansion for Reeducating the Lower Back
3. Improving the Cervical Spine Using Slow, Relaxed Movement
4. Expansion for Relieving Plantar Fasciitis
CHAPTER 7: Balance
1. Gravity
2. Leg Strength and Mobility
3. Finding the Centers of the Feet
4. Knee, Ankle, Arch Alignment
5. Center of Mass
6. Balance Experiments
7. Vision
8. Other Factors
CHAPTER 8: An Analysis of “Rooting and Redirecting”
1. Conditions for Optimal Stability
2. Internal Aspects
CHAPTER 9: Natural Movement
1. Understanding Natural Movement
2. Elements of Natural Movement
3. Independence of Movement
4. Reasons for Studying Natural Movement
5. Examples of Unnatural Movement
6. Tools for Studying Natural Movement
7. Some Basic Physics Concepts
8. Animate and Inanimate Natural Movement
CHAPTER 10: Stepping Like a Cat
1. T’ai-Chi Stepping
2. Yinand Yang
3. Weight Transfer
4. Difficulties in Stepping Like a Cat
5. Order of Stepping: Heel First, Toe First, or Whole Foot?
6. Practicing Stepping to the Side Using a Movement From the T’ai-Chi
Form
7. Stepping Naturally
8. The Swing of the Rear Leg During Stepping Forward
9. The Swing of the Forward Leg During Stepping Forward
10. Stepping at the Right Moment
11. Experiments for Attaining Proper Stepping
12. Swing of the Arms During Walking
CHAPTER 11: Periodic Movement and Timing
1. Periodic Motion
2. Periodic Motion Terms
3. Driven Periodic Motion
4. Linear, Driven, Horizontal Periodic Motion (“Withdraw and Push”)
5. Analysis of the Motion in “Withdraw and Push”
6. Importance of Timing of “Withdraw and Push”
7. Circular Motion of Right Arm in “Single Whip”
8. Centrifugal Effect
9. Centrifugal Effect with Gravity
10. Conical Pendulum
11. “Swinging” About a Vertical Axis, Arms Swinging Side-to-Side
12. Benefits of “Swinging”
13. Fa Chin
14. T’i Fang
CHAPTER 12: Additional Physical Concepts
1. Constraints
2. Rolling Without Slipping
CHAPTER 13: A Clarification of “Secret” Teachings Revealed by Cheng
Man-ch’ing
1. Basic Concepts
2. Neutralizing
3. Attacking
4. Yearning K. Chen ‘s Alternative Way of Deflecting an Attack
5. In Conclusion
CHAPTER 14: Non-Intention, Intention, and “a Hand is Not a Hand”
1. Non-Intention
2. The Mental Transmission of Intention
3. “A Hand is Not a Hand”
4. The Transmission of Intention Over a Distance
CHAPTER 15: Maximizing Your Progress in T’ai Chi
1. Studying T’ai-Chi
2. Obstacles to Learning T’ai-Chi
3. Dealing with Obstacles
4. Dangers of Overusing Images in Movement Arts
5. Validating Your Progress
CHAPTER 16: Perspectives on T’ai Chi
1. Internal Versus External Martial Arts
2. Lifting Versus Lowering
3. Empty / Full, Yin/ YangParadox
4. Some Variations of the T’ai-Chi Symbol
5. T’ai Chi “Weapons”
6. Misinterpretations
7. The Yang Long Form and Professor Cheng’s Short Form
8. The Popularization of T’ai Chi
Afterword
Appendix 1. Basics of Vector Addition
Appendix 2. Analysis of Forces in Rooting
Appendix 3. Analysis of Swing of Hanging Rods
About the Author
Bibliography
Index