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Revision as of 04:50, 26 July 2005 by JFD (talk | contribs) (→The date of []'s death)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Welcome!
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NPOV
Greetings. I agree that there was a problem before, but the current Kalaripayattu article is pretty neutral, so I took the tag off and placed a "controversial" tag on the article's talk page.
Just generally, I'm pretty sure that there was a pan-Eurasian culture set in the Neolithic and early bronze age, but we can only infer it, there is no way to really prove it. As well, there, IMO, isn't any way to prove that KP is the origin of Chinese martial arts. Confucius in the Analects mentions martial training. Qin Shi Huangdi's Terra Cotta Army even had a few statues in kung fu poses, which date from the 3rd century BC, probably 2-300 years before the introduction of Buddhism, and 600 years before Ta Mo. There we have it. Fire Star 04:42, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)
sign your comments
Dear Kenneth,
As you are never LOGIN to do EDITS please use following to sign your comments
{{user|kennethtennyson}}
It will output something like.
kennethtennyson (talk · contribs)
WP:VIP
Hello,
Just for future reference, please sign your comments by using ~~~~. Otherwise, it takes away from our ability to process your report. Thanks. Linuxbeak | Talk | Desk June 29, 2005 00:55 (UTC)
It appears that there is an edit war between you and this user. I suggest using WP:AN for this. Linuxbeak | Talk | Desk June 29, 2005 01:02 (UTC)
interesting controversy
Agree with your assessment; however, I don't know if it is worth all of this controversy. I've never heard of kalaripayattu and it seems like more of a Dance than anything else. Steelhead 29 June 2005 20:38 (UTC)
Buddhists
Kenneth, why don't you become the founding member of Category:Buddhist Wikipedians? -- Ricky81682 (talk) 05:53, July 10, 2005 (UTC)
shuai jiao
chinese wrestling Shuai chiao - has connections to history sites
The date of Bodhidharma's death
I tried to address the conflicts by presenting the information by source rather than redacting them all into a single narrative. The 527 arrival date in China comes from the Zutangji and the Jingde chuandenglu, which is largely taken from the Zutangji, i.e. the last two texts, which means that the primary source for the 528 death date is either Tan Lin or the Xu gaoseng zhuan. I'll put up a bleg for a source on Talk:Bodhidharma.
According to the Broughton (p. 55), Dao Xuan takes the age of Bodhidharma (150) from Yang Xuanzhi, so I'm going to remove the clause that says there's a discrepancy between the two.
- Thanks for the correction.
- Just a couple of things:
- # Which text dates Bodhidharma's death to 528?
- # If Dao Xuan takes his figure for Bodhidharma's age from Yang Xuanzhi, shouldn't they give identical ages at death?
- I won't do any edits on this stuff until we clear this up.
- Thanks.