While there is a certain calmness of mind a person usually learns while training, there are many schools that do not address the balance in the mind that goes along with the balance in the body that is martial arts training. MMA specifically doesn't necessarily address this, instead focusing on the rage that provides focus, while ignoring the calm that keeps that rage on a leash.
Without that calm, arrogance and braggadocio are left on the table. This means anyone walking into that environment if they have those attributes may retain them to some extent, that extent dependent on the scope that the training addresses that mind/body balance.
I know some that are very decent fighters and are full of such arrogance. They aren't "the best" of course, but they don't suck either.
I would say, "there is a difference between martial arts and fighting," which is what I think you mean. If that is what you mean, I agree. But I would also say you can't be a good martial artist if you don't also fight, even if only under practice settings. Those practice settings must include bumps, bruises, blood, a good amount of pain, and very likely cracked or even broken bones. If you are not defending yourself from real danger, you can't learn the craft.
Perfect practice makes perfect. You can't have perfect practice without an opponent that is trying to hurt you in earnest, even if they aren't trying to hurt you bad.
Thus without some level of the "sport" aspect of it, martial arts is just slightly above useless as a form of defense against any attacker with any meaningful measure of skill.
It takes more skill to throw a punch and stop just shy of your target than it is to beat someone to a pulp, grasshopper. Control is everything. Emotions will defeat you.
I wasn't talking about the skill of throwing a precise punch, but the skill of avoiding a real punch (or a flurry of real attacks by a skilled and intended opponent) and of taking a real punch. Those are skills that are too often ignored in the "art" part of the "martial."
Ignorance of what happens in a real fight will defeat you.
While there is a certain calmness of mind a person usually learns while training, there are many schools that do not address the balance in the mind that goes along with the balance in the body that is martial arts training. MMA specifically doesn't necessarily address this, instead focusing on the rage that provides focus, while ignoring the calm that keeps that rage on a leash.
Without that calm, arrogance and braggadocio are left on the table. This means anyone walking into that environment if they have those attributes may retain them to some extent, that extent dependent on the scope that the training addresses that mind/body balance.
I know some that are very decent fighters and are full of such arrogance. They aren't "the best" of course, but they don't suck either.
There is a difference between martial arts and martial sports. Martial sports is the lesser of the two.
I would say, "there is a difference between martial arts and fighting," which is what I think you mean. If that is what you mean, I agree. But I would also say you can't be a good martial artist if you don't also fight, even if only under practice settings. Those practice settings must include bumps, bruises, blood, a good amount of pain, and very likely cracked or even broken bones. If you are not defending yourself from real danger, you can't learn the craft.
Perfect practice makes perfect. You can't have perfect practice without an opponent that is trying to hurt you in earnest, even if they aren't trying to hurt you bad.
Thus without some level of the "sport" aspect of it, martial arts is just slightly above useless as a form of defense against any attacker with any meaningful measure of skill.
It takes more skill to throw a punch and stop just shy of your target than it is to beat someone to a pulp, grasshopper. Control is everything. Emotions will defeat you.
I wasn't talking about the skill of throwing a precise punch, but the skill of avoiding a real punch (or a flurry of real attacks by a skilled and intended opponent) and of taking a real punch. Those are skills that are too often ignored in the "art" part of the "martial."
Ignorance of what happens in a real fight will defeat you.