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Shaolin vs. AI: Can a Neural Network Master 1,500 Years of Kung Fu?: An Experiment in Teaching Ancie

by Kuo (杨慎立阔), Yang Shen-Li

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Description

This book came to life after I spent an afternoon watching a robot try to learn Kung Fu. The machine moved with perfect accuracy, hitting every pose exactly right, but it left me feeling empty. That experience sent me down a path talking to real people who live and breathe martial arts - old masters, young fighters, and the scientists trying to teach robots to move like humans.

What I found surprised me. In a small temple in Henan, a Shaolin monk told me how his students learn more from his tired, imperfect demonstrations than his perfect ones. "When I mess up," he said, "they see how to recover." At a tech startup in Silicon Valley, engineers showed me a robot that could do 10,000 kicks without tiring, but admitted it would never understand why we kick in the first place. These conversations kept circling back to the same idea - there's something about martial arts that lives in the sweat and struggle of human practice, not just the movements themselves.

The book follows these discoveries through everyday stories. There's the boxing coach in Chicago who uses punch-tracking apps but still teaches his kids to trust their instincts. The self-defense instructor who found that students trained only with VR headsets froze when faced with a real, shouting opponent. The elderly tai chi teacher who worries young people care more about perfect forms posted online than the quiet strength the practice builds over years.

What emerges isn't against technology - some of the most hopeful examples come from places finding smart ways to blend old and new. Like the dojo where beginners learn forms through an app but advanced students still spend hours polishing techniques with human partners. Or the MMA gym using motion capture to analyze fights while keeping the raw, loud energy that makes training feel alive. The big question isn't whether machines can fight, but whether we'll remember why humans started training in the first place - not just to win matches, but to build discipline, courage, and connection that no algorithm can replicate.

This is ultimately a book about people - the teachers passing down knowledge that's survived centuries, the students discovering their strength, and all of us figuring out what to keep and what to change as technology reshapes even our oldest traditions. It's not about perfect answers, but about paying attention to what we might lose if we're not careful, and how we might grow without leaving our humanity behind.

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Product Details

  • Jun 26, 2025 Pub Date:
  • 9798289836649 ISBN-10:
  • 9798289836649 ISBN-13:
  • English Language