I haven't posted for over a year. Still doing tai chi and bjj. I just wanted to share a little bit of my experience over the last couple of years with the board.
BJJ is the best thing that could have happened to the martial arts/sciences. It is real, and it is effective. Not to mention you can really use your skills without some granola muncher whining about you being hard!!!! The Gracie's have forced everyone to get real. The response from other martial artists has forced BJJ practioners to further refine and develop addtional wrestling and striking skills. Brazil's Top Team is a great example of the BJJ attitude towards change and empty hand combat.
The majority of the CMAs are currently practiced as arts. Full contact competition is shunned and the practice of flowing forms is paramount. Techniques can be mined from the form, but application is shrouded in "mystery." Form is valued over function and application. You'll have no idea how to really throw down. These arts are valuable in and of themselves but their value in a combat situation is suspect at best.
Martial Sport is by definition a limited version of of a martial art/science where certain skills are rewarded with a trophy/medal. Boxing, Wrestling, Judo and Tae Kwon Do are the best examples of fighting arts/sciences that have slowly become almost purely sport. Judo is starting to take note of its combat roots again because of BJJ and their shared history. Mixed Martial Arts is a martial sport with the fewest rules. San Shou is sport.
Martial Science has been practiced since the early days of the Shaolin Temple. What was done before was not paramount; effectiveness alone counted. For example, Jigoro Kano created a martial science that evolved into martial sport. My BJJ instructors are always tweaking their technique to keep BJJ ahead of the rest. Theory, test theory, new theory........... They want to keep BJJ a martial science.
What do you do? Are you an artist? A scientist? A sport competitor?