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The image displays a book page, rotated 90 degrees clockwise, featuring text and a stylized portrait. The main subject is a faded, sepia-toned portrait of a man, identified as Yip Man, positioned on the left side of the page. The background appears to be a light-colored surface, possibly a table or bookstand.

The page contains bilingual text: Chinese characters on the left and English text on the right. The prominent titles are "授業恩師" (Master Teacher) and "葉問" (Yip Man). The English text provides biographical information about Yip Man, identifying him as "a native of Sangyuan, Foshan, Nanhai County, Guangdong Province, the founder of the Wing Chun system, the grand master."

The text describes Bruce Lee's training with Yip Man at 13 years old, highlighting Yip Man's open-minded approach to martial arts, his emphasis on practical combat and training ("views exchanges" or "actual practice") over elaborate forms, and his significant influence on Bruce Lee's martial arts philosophy, which later informed Jeet Kune Do. A key philosophy cited is: "We focus on the concept of practicing and fighting rather than the movements. We can take our own advantages to deal with all movements."
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FM-CaIMM2

Jan 4, 2025, 8:29 AM

Guang Zhou Shi, China

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The image displays a book page, rotated 90 degrees clockwise, featuring text and a stylized portrait. The main subject is a faded, sepia-toned portrait of a man, identified as Yip Man, positioned on the left side of the page. The background appears to be a light-colored surface, possibly a table or bookstand. The page contains bilingual text: Chinese characters on the left and English text on the right. The prominent titles are "授業恩師" (Master Teacher) and "葉問" (Yip Man). The English text provides biographical information about Yip Man, identifying him as "a native of Sangyuan, Foshan, Nanhai County, Guangdong Province, the founder of the Wing Chun system, the grand master." The text describes Bruce Lee's training with Yip Man at 13 years old, highlighting Yip Man's open-minded approach to martial arts, his emphasis on practical combat and training ("views exchanges" or "actual practice") over elaborate forms, and his significant influence on Bruce Lee's martial arts philosophy, which later informed Jeet Kune Do. A key philosophy cited is: "We focus on the concept of practicing and fighting rather than the movements. We can take our own advantages to deal with all movements."

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FFM-CaIMM2

Jan 4, 2025, 8:29 AM

Guang Zhou Shi, China

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