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Aikido as an ideal martial art

open access: yesAikido as an ideal martial art
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Aikido Experience and its Relation to Mindfulness: A Two-Part Study [PDF]

open access: yesPerceptual and Motor Skills, 2013
The martial art Aikido may be useful in the development of mindfulness. In this study, the authors examined the potential association of training in Aikido may have on mindfulness.
John E Lothes
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Aikido and software engineering

Proceedings of the 2004 ACM workshop on Interdisciplinary software engineering research, 2004
Aikido is a martial art whose core philosophy is about conflict resolution and taking care of our opponents and ourselves. My experience, and the experience of fellow aikidoists who work in software development, is that the practice and philosophy of aikido enhance our ability to be effective in the workplace. This paper discusses why this may be.
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Hypnosis, Ericksonian Hypnotherapy, and Aikido

American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1992
Several key Ericksonian concepts find cross-cultural validation and practical application in the Japanese martial art of Aikido. The Aikido psychophysiological state of centering shares several important attributes with the trance state, particularly in the relational aspects of shared trance.
R, Windle, M, Samko
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Ki aikido: a solution to stress

British Dental Journal, 1990
It is common knowledge that the life of the general dental practitioner is extremely stressful. Different dentists resort to various ways of unwinding--perhaps a game of golf, a sailing trip, or mending the odd clock as occupational therapy. These are all ways of getting away from the stress of day-to-day work--but perhaps the time has come to look for
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A Comparison of Judo and Aikido Injuries

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1980
Judo and aikido use similar techniques, so players may suffer similar injuries. But because judo is competitive, its injury rate may be higher.
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Aikido and Mediation

2015
In the course of human evolution, much thought and energy have gone into improving techniques by which parties with opposed interests have carried out conflicts. The most dramatic arena of such improvements has concerned the instruments of combat: from stone to iron knives and spears, from plain to poison-tipped arrows, from slingshots to guns, from ...
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Ethics through Aikido

International Journal of Applied Philosophy, 2001
A mugging can overwhelm our ability to apply moral principles. When words fail, we still need advice that allows us to remain moral in the face of an attack. Self-defense offers just such advice and can be supported by utilitarian, deontological, and virtue approaches to ethics.
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