The critical element would be performing the exercise under the appropriate guidance. Without guidance it would require more conscious thought and experimentation to ensure the correct result happens.
True, but even under these circumstances- what about your practising? It's the overwhelming majority of what you do. My ideal is a great teacher plus a solid conscious grasp of the simplest conception for performing basic movements and monitoring holes in them. I really don't believe anyone is poorer for that- provided that it gets to the most important issues.
Which is probably half of marik/p2u/pts ('s) arguement against the over thinking mechanically - that its a outrageously long process that could be learnt by "feel with guidance" much faster than it can by "mechanics and no guidance". Assuming you have a decent teacher, and I really don't know of any teachers in my immediate area that I would trust for such development..
Exactly. How may teachers are even vaguely aware of the stuff that someone like Alan Fraser teaches? If Marik's approach is to be the ideal- how the hell are teachers supposed to even know what they are doing, if they only learned an individual and entirely instinctive feel for technique- via subjective means, rather than via understanding of the concepts behind them? I think basic understanding of simple premises should come in all standard teaching- if for no other reason than to ensure that anyone who teaches knows a little more than a feel that words cannot convey. Even to train feel by feel, you have to know what is going on under the surface. To possess a feel does not make it any easier to train someone else to possess that same feel, whether via words or otherwise. It takes understanding of concepts and insight into why certain things are good or bad. The fact that so little of this is widely passed on is why so many teachers are clueless about teaching technique.
I don't dislike the mechanical explanation of a concept for the right person - I do dislike a focus on it though. I think its possible (as a student) to take a mechanical explanation and aim for what you interpret to be the correct movement (but its actually horribly wrong) and because you are not referencing a good 'feel' in the process you are blindly playing with a poor technique thinking it is right. I don't see how it can ever become what it has to ultimately be (unconcious execution) unless you just instinctively feel it.
Of course. But how can you feel it in the first place, if your conception is all wrong. My suspicion is that those who would stop feeling simply due to a rational concept would do no better through feel to begin with. I only ever use premises to educate feel. The only conflict is when a premise is plain wrong- as so many subjective approaches (purporting to be an objective statement of reality) sadly are. I think the big problem is fantasy portrayed as fact- not simple premises that are grounded in reality. As I described earlier, understanding the myth of "fixation" (and realising that intent to counter collapse with movement rather than locking) educated my sense of feel more than any vague advice I have ever been given. I had to understand both that fixation is altogether without purpose and that it's specifically a simpler movement that replaces its function, before I could move on from being stuck between locking/collapsing. A complete fiction had limited me. The simplicity of coming to see reality as it is took me straight to a solution.
I think this exercise could be explained better as I have tried to use a similar wording for students and they don't always understand and I have to reiterate. When done correctly it is EXTREMELY obvious what the right "feel" is and what you have to emulate without any thought toward what is correct mechanically.
I'd echo that entirely- except by saying that I could not educate myself on direct paths until I understood the basic concept for my extension action. From there, it's been all about educating an instinctive feel for the fine tuning via trial and improvement. Just because something starts out with a conscious concept, it does not mean that the senses close down. On the contrary, it gave my senses something to start working usefully with. Unless you can guarantee having done something correctly, there can be no "feel" for what is right. Even then, the feel can slide- unless you have a simple means of making sure that you are doing trial and improvement (rather than merely trial and error with random guesswork).