With the accumulation of over thirty years of
practical Martial Arts experience the Sr. Grandmaster of
American Kenpo Karate Ed Parker Sr. decided to document
and share his findings in a monumental series of books.
Writing with the intent to expound upon the merits of
his American KENPO Martial Arts system, he wrote of it's
many facets as, ''a discipline, a way of life, a
philosophy, and an art and a science.'' With each book
intended to offer a unique and exciting adventure into
KENPO knowledge, he called the series of five volumes ''
Infinite Insights Into Kenpo.''Early in 1982, Mr. Parker
completed and published the first book in the ''Infinite
Insights Into Kenpo'' series, titled ''Mental
Stimulation''. He wrote, ''I was sensitive to the need
of innovations during my early years of training.
Analyzing the methods of fighting in Hawaii, the place
of my birth and early rearing, verified the
unquestionable need for an updated approach to the
Martial Arts.'' Mr. Parker broke the bonds of tradition
and experimented with more logical and practical means
of combating modern day methods of fighting. What
emerged was, in his own words, ''my own interpretation
of the Art.'' It was this perspective that he introduced
in this initial volume and developed and expanded upon
through his subsequent works.Mr. Parker introduced an
unparalleled number of combative predicaments,
indicating the need for several viewpoints. Thee mystic
''Universal Pattern'', introduced to the public for the
first time some twenty years earlier, was put into
context. In an effort to develop and articulate
definable qualities in the Martial Arts, he sought to
set the backdrop for the unknown to become known, the
intangible to become tangible and for the mysticism to
disappear. |
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