APAD: In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king

来源: 2024-02-14 09:03:07 [博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:

Meaning:

Among incompetents, even mediocrity passes for brilliance

 

Background:

 

The first known reference to this proverb is in Why Come Ye Nat to Courte?, a

poem by Englishman John Skelton, published around 1522. The poem is one of a

number in which he takes Cardinal Wolsey to task, with pithy lines such as

these:

 

    He is so ambicyous

    So shamles, and so vicious

    And so supersticyous

    And so moche oblivious...

 

Some years before, Skelton had been appointed tutor to the future Henry VIII and

was on good terms with Thomas Wolsey, but he ended up in prison later in his

life, most likely having offended the, by then, very powerful Cardinal Wolsey.

Not long after, Skelton retired from court and became rector of Diss, a town in

the East of England, well away from the intrigue of the Tudor court.

 

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This truism is often cited in the BJJ community. I read it in Rickson's book(I

think) and heard it in podcasts where martial artists reminiscing the pre-UFC

days. [Rorion Gracie started UFC in 1993 to market his family-style jiu-jitsu.]

The idea is that as most people don't know ground fighting (wrestlers pin but

don't submit) and overrate their ability to defend themselves, someone with

basic BJJ skills could easily dominate. When his boy asked if there was magic in

the world, Jocko Willink, the former Seal commando of the Battle of Ramadi (Iraq)

fame, answered in three syllables: "Jiu-jitsu."