Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

A Parable on Naturalistic Decision-Making

The Art of Knowing Without Knowing


by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

 

No map, no mirror—

the hand reaches before thought,

the right path appears.

 

Years fold into bone—

the sensei reads the storm whole

before clouds have gathered.

 


CAVEAT (Keikoku [警告])

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. 


All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force. 


Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental. 


All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

I. A Question Worth Asking

Let’s start with an honest question: Have you ever made a decision so fast that you couldn’t explain it — and been right? Not lucky, but right? The kind of rightness that, when you tried to put it into words afterward, you found yourself saying, “I don’t know… I just knew.”


That’s not a mystical experience. That’s your nervous system and your memory working together at a speed that your conscious verbal mind simply cannot keep up with. Researchers have a name for it: Naturalistic Decision-Making, or NDM. And it turns out, understanding how it works — and when to trust it — is one of the most practical things a thinking person can do.


So let’s sit down together and think through it. Not in the language of laboratory reports, but in the language of human experience. We’ll use a few parables along the way, because stories are often the most honest containers for complex truths.

 

II. The Parable of the Fire Captain

A Story from the Field

There was once a fire captain named Joseph who had spent twenty-three years fighting structure fires. His crew respected him not because he was loud or dramatic, but because he seemed to know things before he should have known them.


One winter evening, his crew was called to a house fire in a quiet neighborhood. The blaze appeared manageable — smoke seeping from the lower windows, fire visible in the kitchen. His men began their suppression work, and Joseph stood in the doorway watching. His crew leader called out: “We’re making progress, Cap. It’s responding.”


Joseph stood there another few seconds. Something was wrong. He couldn’t name it yet. The fire was too quiet. The floor felt slightly wrong under his boots. The heat wasn’t matching the smoke pattern.

“Get out,” he said. “Everybody out. Now.”


They moved. Twenty seconds later, the floor collapsed into a fully involved basement fire that had been masked by the structure above it. No one was hurt.


Afterward, his crew asked him: “How did you know?” He shook his head slowly. “I didn’t know that I knew. I just knew it was wrong.”

 

This story is adapted from a landmark study by Gary Klein and his colleagues, who interviewed firefighters to understand how experienced commanders actually made life-or-death decisions in the field. What they found upended a long-held assumption in cognitive science.


The assumption was this: good decisions require options. You generate multiple courses of action, you weigh each against a set of criteria, you select the best one. This is called classical decision theory, and it works beautifully in spreadsheets and business schools. In burning buildings, it gets people killed.


Joseph didn’t weigh options. He didn’t generate alternatives. His experience had given him what Klein (1998) called a “recognition-primed decision”: a rapid, largely unconscious matching of the current situation to a stored pattern, followed immediately by a simulated course of action. He recognized the situation — not fully, not in words, but in the body — and his body told him to move.

 

III. What Naturalistic Decision-Making Actually Is

Naturalistic Decision-Making emerged as a field in the late 1980s when a group of researchers — including Gary Klein, Jens Rasmussen, and Judith Orasanu — decided to stop studying decision-making in laboratories and go study it where it actually happened: firehouses, military command centers, emergency rooms, and cockpits.


What they found was that in high-stakes, time-pressured environments, experienced decision-makers almost never engage in formal option generation. They don’t stop and say, “Let me consider three possible responses.” Instead, they use what researchers call “situation assessment” — a rapid reading of the environment based on trained pattern recognition — and then mentally simulate a single course of action to check if it seems workable. If it does, they act. If something feels off during the simulation, they adjust.


Klein (1998) formalized this as the Recognition-Primed Decision (RPD) model. The model has three levels of complexity, but at its core it says this: expertise doesn’t make you better at considering more options. It makes you better at rapidly recognizing which option is good enough to act on.


Kahneman (2011) has helped the broader public understand this through his distinction between System 1 and System 2 thinking. 


System 1 is fast, automatic, intuitive, and experience-driven. 

System 2 is slow, deliberate, analytical, and effortful. 


NDM is primarily a System 1 phenomenon — but with an important asterisk. It is not the shallow System 1 of cognitive bias and snap judgment. It is the trained System 1 of deep experience, where pattern recognition has been built through thousands of hours of feedback-rich practice.


Ericsson and colleagues (1993) described this kind of expertise as the result of deliberate practice — structured, feedback-intensive training that gradually automates complex skills. The expert’s fast thinking isn’t lazy thinking. It is the compressed product of years of slow, careful learning.

 

IV. The Parable of the Sword Examiner

A Story from the Dojo

An old sword examiner was brought before three blades in a market in Okinawa. The merchant was proud of all three, and he asked the examiner which was the finest work.


The examiner stood before the first blade for a long time, turning it in the light, running his thumb along the spine, closing his eyes. Then he moved to the second. Then to the third. With the third blade, he stopped almost immediately.


“This one,” he said.


The merchant was incredulous. “But you barely looked at it.”


The old man smiled. “I looked at the first two because they required looking. The third one told me what it was before I could ask.”


The merchant pressed him: “But how do you know? What did you see?”

The examiner was quiet for a moment. Then he said: “I have held ten thousand blades. The question is not what I saw this morning. The question is what forty years of mornings have taught my hands to feel.”

 

This parable is fictional, but it illustrates a genuine cognitive phenomenon. Moxley et al. (2012) studied chess masters and found that grandmasters not only recognized superior moves faster than novices, but they often couldn’t fully explain why a move was superior — they simply perceived it as correct. The knowledge was real. The articulability of that knowledge was limited.


This is sometimes called “tacit knowledge” — knowledge that is held in the body and in the patterns of perception, not in propositional language. Polanyi (1966) famously captured this with the phrase: “We know more than we can tell.” That phrase is the entire NDM tradition in six words.


V. What This Means for the Practitioner

If you train in a martial art, if you work in law enforcement, emergency medicine, or military operations, if you coach or teach or lead people through uncertainty — then NDM is not an abstract theory. It is a description of what you are building every time you train, every time you debrief, every time you put yourself through realistic stress.


Consider the self-defense context. When a trained person correctly reads a pre-attack indicator — a blade-hand concealment, a shifting of weight, an ocular scan of the environment — they are engaging NDM. They are not thinking, “This person has shifted their dominant foot to the rear, which statistically correlates with imminent aggression.” They are thinking nothing. They are perceiving a threat, and their training is already responding.


Endsley (1995) described this as “situation awareness” — the accurate perception of the environment, the comprehension of its meaning, and the projection of its near-future state. In the NDM framework, situation awareness is the engine that drives recognition-primed response. The more accurate your situational model, the faster and more reliably your recognition fires.


Grossman and Christensen (2004) explored the psychophysiology of this in combat contexts, noting that trained individuals show different stress responses than untrained ones — not because they feel no fear, but because their training has automated enough of their response that cognitive load is reduced, and effective action remains possible even when adrenaline and cortisol are flooding the bloodstream.


The implication for training is clear: you do not build NDM capability by studying it. You build it by doing, repeatedly, with feedback, under progressively realistic conditions. The theory tells you why to train. The mat tells you how.


VI. A Fair Counterpoint — With Intellectual Humility

It would not be honest to present naturalistic decision-making as though it were without critics. There are serious thinkers who have raised legitimate objections, and those objections deserve a respectful hearing.


The most powerful counter-argument comes from Daniel Kahneman himself, whose collaboration and eventual public disagreement with Gary Klein is now something of a classic case study in academic discourse (Kahneman & Klein, 2009). Kahneman’s concern is this: intuition is not uniformly reliable. The conditions under which System 1 thinking performs well — and the conditions under which it fails catastrophically — are not always easy to distinguish from the inside.


Specifically, Kahneman argues that intuitive expertise is only reliable when two conditions are met: 


(1) the environment must be sufficiently regular that patterns are learnable; and 

(2) the practitioner must have received adequate, timely feedback on their judgments over a long period of time. 


Firefighting meets both conditions. Stock market prediction does not. The experienced stock trader who “just knows” that a stock is about to rise is not engaging NDM. They are engaging overconfidence.


This is a distinction worth sitting with. Not all environments are created equal, and not all experienced people have been learning from experience. Some have simply been reinforcing their errors for twenty years.


Tetlock (2005), in his landmark work on expert political judgment, found that many domain experts performed barely better than chance in predicting political and economic outcomes — and that the experts who performed worst were often the most confident. The danger of intuition is not that it is unreliable. The danger is that it feels reliable even when it is not.


We take this objection seriously. We do not believe in the uncritical celebration of gut instinct. What we believe — and what the NDM research actually supports — is that trained intuition in feedback-rich, pattern-regular environments is a genuine cognitive achievement worthy of cultivation and trust. The key word is “trained.” The other key word is “feedback.”


The sensei who has received honest feedback about the effectiveness of his technique for thirty years is not the same as the bar fighter who has never been seriously challenged. Both may feel equally certain. Only one has earned that certainty.


We hold this tension openly: NDM is real, and its limits are real. Good practice is knowing which environment you are in, and whether your experience has been truly educative or merely repetitive.

 

VII. Closing Thoughts

One Final Parable

A student once came to a master archer and asked: “How long before I can shoot without thinking?”


The master said: “That is the wrong question.”


The student tried again: “How long before I can shoot correctly without thinking?”


The master smiled. “Now you are asking. The answer is: when the thinking has gone all the way inside.”


The student frowned. “What does that mean?”


“It means,” the master said, drawing and releasing in one seamless motion, “that thinking and not-thinking become the same thing. That is when you are ready.”

 

Naturalistic Decision-Making is not a shortcut. It is not an excuse to stop thinking. It is the description of what happens when thinking has been done so thoroughly, and for so long, that it no longer needs to be performed consciously. It becomes perception. It becomes reflex. It becomes character.


The fire captain knew when to leave the building not because he had stopped caring about evidence, but because twenty-three years of evidence had become his nervous system. The sword examiner knew the fine blade not because he had abandoned analysis, but because forty years of analysis had been compressed into touch.


That is the promise and the demand of naturalistic decision-making: not the absence of rigor, but the transformation of rigor into something faster and deeper than conscious thought. It is an art built from science, and a science that eventually looks like art.

Train accordingly.


Bibliography

Endsley, M. R. (1995). Toward a theory of situation awareness in dynamic systems. Human Factors, 37(1), 32–64. https://doi.org/10.1518/001872095779049543

Ericsson, K. A., Krampe, R. T., & Tesch-Römer, C. (1993). The role of deliberate practice in the acquisition of expert performance. Psychological Review, 100(3), 363–406. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-295X.100.3.363

Grossman, D., & Christensen, L. W. (2004). On combat: The psychology and physiology of deadly conflict in war and in peace. PPCT Research Publications.

Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Kahneman, D., & Klein, G. (2009). Conditions for intuitive expertise: A failure to disagree. American Psychologist, 64(6), 515–526. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0016755

Klein, G. A. (1998). Sources of power: How people make decisions. MIT Press.

Klein, G. A. (2008). Naturalistic decision making. Human Factors, 50(3), 456–460. https://doi.org/10.1518/001872008X288385

Moxley, J. H., Ericsson, K. A., Charness, N., & Krampe, R. T. (2012). The role of intuition and deliberative thinking in experts’ superior tactical decision-making. Cognition, 124(1), 72–78. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2012.03.005

Polanyi, M. (1966). The tacit dimension. Doubleday.

Tetlock, P. E. (2005). Expert political judgment: How good is it? How can we know? Princeton University Press.

 

 

© 2026 CEJames & Akira Ichinose. All rights reserved.

Page

Dō (道): The Way That Cannot Be Named

 Parable on the Path of Chinese, Japanese, and Okinawan Philosophy

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira Ichinose (editor/research assistant)

 

Haiku I

River finds the sea—

no map, no argument, just

the pull of what is.

 

Haiku II

Old pine needs no name—

roots deep, branches bent by wind,

still, it is the Way.

 

CAVEAT (Keikoku [警告])

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. 


Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction; readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force. 


Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental. All content is protected under applicable copyright law. 


Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

I. An Old Character, an Older Question

The Chinese character 道 — pronounced Dào in Mandarin, Dō in Japanese, and roughly Dō or Michi in Okinawan usage — is one of the most written and least understood words in the history of thought. Philosophers have argued about it for more than two and a half millennia. Warriors have tried to live it. Potters, calligraphers, gardeners, and swordsmiths have claimed it visits their hands when the ego steps out of the way. If you ask ten scholars what Dō means, you will receive ten answers, a dozen arguments, and, if you are lucky, one honest shrug.


So let us not begin with definitions. Definitions are useful servants but poor guides. Let us begin, instead, with a story — because Dō, whatever else it is, moves through narrative the way water moves through rock: slowly, invisibly, and with permanent effect.

 

The Parable of the Wheelwright

In the thirty-second year of Duke Huan of Qi, there was a wheelwright named Pao who worked in a courtyard beneath the palace hall where the Duke was reading the words of the ancient sages. The Duke heard the chisel and called down: "Wheelwright, what do you read below?" Pao set down his tools. "Your Highness reads the husks of dead men." The Duke’s face darkened. "Explain yourself, craftsman, or face execution." Pao said: "When I work a wheel, if I go too slowly, the chisel slides and the wood gives no grip. If I go too fast, it chatters and the wood splits. I find the pace in my hand, not in any book. My father could not teach it to me; I cannot leave it to my son. It is a thing that lives between the wood and the hands and has no name. The sages knew this thing. But what they knew, they could not transmit. So what your Highness reads are their husks." The Duke put the book down. He did not execute the wheelwright.

— After Zhuangzi, “Heavens and Earth,” Chapter 13 (author’s paraphrase)

 

Zhuangzi’s wheelwright story is the oldest and most honest introduction to Dō. The old craftsman is not being arrogant. He is being precise. The thing that makes a wheel true — that ineffable calibration of force and angle and timing — does not survive translation into language. The sages of the classics knew the Dō. The books they left are maps of a country the maps cannot enter. Dō, by its nature, resists being captured. Laozi himself opened the Tao Te Ching by announcing this paradox: “The Way that can be spoken is not the eternal Way.” (Laozi, Chapter 1)


And yet here we are, speaking of it. That is not a contradiction. It is, perhaps, the first thing Dō teaches: hold your own words lightly.

 

II. The Chinese Root: Dào and the Art of Going Along

In the Chinese philosophical tradition, Dào is not a single idea but a field of ideas that different schools occupied differently. The Taoists — Laozi, Zhuangzi, and their inheritors — understood Dào as the undivided ground of existence: the nameless source from which the ten thousand things arise, move, and return. The Confucians appropriated the term but filled it with ethical substance: for them, Dào was the moral path of human relationships, the pattern of righteous conduct that aligns the individual with Heaven and the social order. The Legalists used it to describe the way of effective governance. The same character, three very different conversations.


What unites them is motion. Dào is never static. Even in its emptiness, the Taoist Dào is described as turning, generating, returning. The ideogram itself is instructive: a radical meaning “to go” combined with a character suggesting a head or a leading motion. Dào, at its etymological root, means going a way, moving along a path. It is not a destination but a traveling.


The concept of Wu Wei — “non-action” or more accurately “acting without forcing” — is the Taoist prescription for how a human being ought to move along the Dào. You do not wrestle the river. You enter the current. The farmer who forces the seedling upward destroys the seedling. The general who fights the terrain fights on two fronts. The sage who insists on her own interpretation of events has already lost the thread of what is actually happening. Dào rewards attentiveness and punishes urgency.

 

The Parable of the Two Generals

Two generals were given the same narrow valley and told to hold it. The first studied his maps at night and by morning had built his defenses exactly where the textbooks said to build them. The second walked the valley at dusk, sat in its silence, and noticed that the eastern ridgeline held the sound of water long after the rains had passed. He placed his men not where the map suggested, but where the valley itself seemed to breathe. When the enemy came, both valleys were contested. The first general’s position was broken by midday. The second’s held for three days with half the men. When asked afterward how he had known where to stand, the second general looked puzzled. “I did not choose the position,” he said. “The valley chose it for me.”

 

This is not mysticism. It is observation so practiced it has become transparent to itself. Sun Tzu called it shih — strategic configuration, the shape of advantage that a situation naturally offers to the one patient enough to see it (Sun Tzu, Chapter 5). Dào in the military arts is not passivity; it is a kind of active receptivity, a listening that comes before any speaking.

 

III. The Japanese Dō: Path as Discipline

When Chinese philosophical and cultural currents crossed into Japan, the character Dào took root as Dō but grew differently. Japan is a practical civilization. It tends to ask not “what is the Way?” but “how does one walk it?” The result was a profound domestication of an enormous idea: Dō became a suffix attached to disciplined practice. Judō. Kendō. Karate-Dō. Sadō (the way of tea). Shodō (the way of calligraphy). Ikebana. Even the organizational structures of Japanese crafts and arts came to be understood as paths with their own interior logic, their own spiritual gravity.


The philosopher Nishida Kitarō, writing in the early twentieth century, argued that the Japanese understanding of Dō was grounded in what he called “pure experience” — the moment before the self and its object have separated, before thought has divided the practitioner from the practice. In the Dō arts, the goal is not to master a technique but to be mastered by it — to disappear into it so completely that the distinction between doer and deed dissolves (Nishida, 1911/1990).


This explains something that often puzzles Western observers of Japanese martial arts: why the emphasis on kata — repeated, formal pattern practice — long after the practitioner “knows” the movements. In the Dō framework, the kata is not a mnemonic. It is a vehicle. 


The body is memorizing something the mind cannot hold: 

the rhythm of encounter, 

the geometry of response, 

the physical grammar of calm under pressure. Repetition is not drill; it is deepening.

 

The Parable of the Calligrapher’s Silence

A student came to a master calligrapher and asked how long it would take to learn the art. “Three years for the brush, seven years for the ink, a lifetime for the silence,” said the master. The student was impatient and went away to practice on his own. In three years he returned with a scroll of beautiful characters. The master looked at them and nodded politely. “The brush is learned,” he said. Seven years later the student returned again. The characters shone. The master nodded again. “The ink is learned.” Forty years after that, the student, now an old man with failing sight, returned with a single character on a worn sheet of practice paper. His hand had trembled. The line was imperfect. The master bowed. “The silence has begun,” he said.

 

Dō in Japan is understood as a spiral, not a straight lineThe practitioner returns to the beginning not because he has failed to advance, but because advancing reveals how deep the beginning truly is. Musashi, in the Book of Five Rings, warned his reader that the warrior who knows techniques but does not know the Way is “only a soldier” (Musashi, 1643/1974). The Way is what gives the technique its soul.

 

IV. The Okinawan Dimension: Michi, Body, and the Breath of Naha

Okinawa occupies a distinctive position in this conversation. A small archipelago at the crossroads of Chinese, Japanese, and Southeast Asian civilization, Okinawa absorbed Dào from China directly — through trade, through the tributary missions to the Ming and Qing courts, through the Chinese communities settled in Kume Village near Naha — and also received the Japanese reinterpretation of Dō as formal discipline. The result is a tradition that holds both in a distinctly Okinawan embrace: earthy, practical, grounded in the body, and yet touched by something larger.


The Okinawan martial arts that became karate — the te of Naha, Shuri, and Tomari, later carried to Japan proper by Funakoshi Gichin and others — were not originally called karate-dō. They were called tode or te, meaning simply “hand.” The dō suffix was added later, largely under Japanese influence, and with it came an explicit philosophical aspiration: this is not merely a fighting method but a path for the formation of character.


Tatsuo Shimabuku, the founder of Isshin-ryū, grounded his system in this dual understanding. The name Isshin-ryū itself — “One Heart Way” — is already a declaration of Dō philosophy: the path is not divided into combat application here and spiritual development there. They are the same movement, seen from different angles. In the dojo, this appears as an insistence that technique without intention is gymnastics, and intention without technique is daydreaming. Dō requires both, fused, in the single instant of a committed action (Bishop, 1989).


The concept of chinkuchi — an Okinawan term for the concentrated, explosive transmission of power through precise body mechanics — offers a physical metaphor for Dō itself. Chinkuchi cannot be faked. It requires that the entire body be aligned and moving in the same direction at the same moment. The practitioner who is divided — who is thinking about the technique while doing it, who is watching herself from the outside — dissipates the power before it arrives. Dō demands integration. It demands, in the old Okinawan phrase, that you “become what you do.”

 

The Parable of the Old Fisherman of Itoman

There was an old fisherman in Itoman who had worked the reef for sixty years. Young men from the government came with instruments to measure the currents and told him that his traditional fishing grounds were suboptimal according to the data. He listened politely. The next morning he went to the same grounds he had always used and came back with his boat full. The young men took more measurements. He went back to the same grounds and came back with his boat full. After a week, one of the young men rowed out and sat beside him. “How do you know where to go?” he asked. The fisherman gestured at the water, the sky, the color of the light on the surface. “The sea tells me,” he said. “But you can’t measure what it says?” said the young man. The fisherman looked at him with something that was not quite pity. “Why would I measure what I can hear?”

 

This is Dō made vernacular. The fisherman has not studied philosophy. He has studied the sea for sixty years, and the sea has become, in some sense, part of him. His knowledge is not stored in the mind as propositions; it lives in the hands, the eyes, the posture of his attention. This is what the Japanese call “tacit knowledge” and what the Okinawan martial traditions call the body’s memory. Dō, at its deepest, is this: knowing so fully absorbed that it no longer feels like knowing.

 

V. Common Threads, Different Looms

Across Chinese, Japanese, and Okinawan uses of Dō, several threads reappear with remarkable consistency.


The first is the priority of process over product. In every tradition, Dō is about how, not what. The how contains moral and spiritual information that the what cannot carry. A calligrapher who produces a beautiful character through ego and calculation has not walked the Dō of calligraphy, no matter how beautiful the character. A warrior who wins through cruelty has not walked the Dō of the martial arts, no matter how decisive the victory.


The second is the paradox of effortlessness through effort. Dō does not come without work. The fisherman worked the reef for sixty years. The calligrapher practiced for decades. But the goal of all that work is the disappearance of the work’s appearance — a state in which the action flows without the friction of self-consciousness. The Zen concept of mushin — “no-mind,” the state of unconstricted awareness — describes what Dō feels like from the inside when it is most fully realized.


The third is the insistence on embodiment. Unlike many Western philosophical paths, which tend to locate wisdom in the mind and treat the body as its servant or obstacle, Dō is irreducibly physical. It comes through the hands, the breath, the posture, the quality of attention in movement. This is why the martial arts, the tea ceremony, the garden, and the calligrapher’s studio are all legitimate vehicles for Dō. The body is not carrying the path; the body is walking it.

 

VI. A Counter-Argument, Offered Respectfully

Intellectual honesty requires us to sit with a challenge. The portrait of Dō painted above is coherent and, I believe, largely accurate to its sources. But it is not the only portrait, and some serious thinkers have looked at Dō philosophy and found in it something troubling. Let us give that view a fair hearing.

The critique comes from multiple directions but converges on a central point: Dō thinking, in practice, can function as a powerful legitimation of the status quo. If the fisherman’s knowledge is “in harmony with the Way,” on what grounds do we challenge overfishing? If the warrior’s discipline has been purified into Dō, on what grounds do we question what cause he serves? The philosopher Chad Hansen argued that the Taoist concept of Dào, in its insistence on naturalness and non-forcing, can become a subtle form of conservatism — a philosophical endorsement of things as they are, dressed in the vocabulary of transcendence (Hansen, 1992).


There is a related concern from the sociology of martial arts. The Dō framework, particularly in its institutionalized Japanese form, has sometimes been used to demand unquestioning obedience from students on the grounds that deference to the teacher is itself a form of Dō practice. This can shade, in pathological cases, into a justification for abuse of authority. The student who questions the teacher is told he lacks the humility that Dō requires. This is Dō as ideological tool, not Dō as liberating discipline.


From a Western analytic perspective, there is also a legitimate epistemological objection. The claim that Dō is knowable but not sayable, experienceable but not transmissible through language, can function as an unfalsifiable assertion. If every failure to understand Dō is attributed to the questioner’s insufficient practice or insufficient surrender, the concept becomes immune to critical examination. Philosophy that cannot be questioned is not philosophy; it is faith. And faith, however valuable, should be distinguished clearly from reasoned inquiry.


These are serious objections. I do not think they are fatal to Dō as a philosophical and practical framework, but I think they should inform how we use it. A Dō practice that cannot tolerate critical examination of its own assumptions has already left the path. The Zhuangzi, after all, is full of irreverence toward authority, including philosophical authority. The old wheelwright called the Duke’s books husks. Dō, at its best, is not an invitation to stop thinking; it is an invitation to think from a different place — one less invested in being right and more attentive to what is actually present.

 

VII. A Final Parable: The Gate That Is Not a Gate

An old Okinawan sensei was asked by a visiting scholar: “Sensei, what is karate-dō?” The old man was in the courtyard, sweeping. He did not stop sweeping. “This,” he said, gesturing at the broom moving across the stone. The scholar waited for more. “And in the dojo?” he pressed. The old man turned and looked at him. “Also this,” he said. “And in life?” The old man went back to sweeping. “You are already inside the gate,” he said. “You are asking me where the gate is.”

 

Dō cannot be located because it is not a location. It is a quality of attention brought to whatever is happening, wherever one happens to be standing. The Chinese sages found it in the undivided ground of being. The Japanese masters built formal disciplines to cultivate it. The Okinawan teachers embedded it in the movement of hands and feet and breath. These are different expressions of the same recognition: that there is a way of being present to life that is alive, integrated, and honest — and that this way is always available, always practiced, and never finally mastered.


The broom moves across the stone. The wheel turns true. The river finds the sea.

 

Bibliography

Bishop, M. (1989). Okinawan karate: Teachers, styles and secret techniques. A&C Black.

Chan, W.-T. (1963). A source book in Chinese philosophy. Princeton University Press.

Graham, A. C. (1989). Disputers of the Tao: Philosophical argument in ancient China. Open Court Publishing.

Hansen, C. (1992). A Daoist theory of Chinese thought: A philosophical interpretation. Oxford University Press.

Laozi. (1963). Tao Te Ching (D. C. Lau, Trans.). Penguin Books. (Original work ca. 6th century BCE)

Musashi, M. (1974). The book of five rings (V. Harris, Trans.). Overlook Press. (Original work 1643)

Nishida, K. (1990). An inquiry into the good (M. Abe & C. Ives, Trans.). Yale University Press. (Original work published 1911)

Sun Tzu. (1963). The art of war (S. B. Griffith, Trans.). Oxford University Press. (Original work ca. 5th century BCE)

Suzuki, D. T. (1959). Zen and Japanese culture. Princeton University Press.

Watson, B. (Trans.). (1968). The complete works of Chuang Tzu. Columbia University Press.

Zhuangzi. (1968). Heavens and earth (B. Watson, Trans.). In B. Watson (Trans.), The complete works of Chuang Tzu (pp. 162–163). Columbia University Press. (Original work ca. 3rd century BCE)

 

© CEJames & Akira Ichinose. All rights reserved.

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