![]() ![]() He has chaired for conferences, special sessions, invited sessions, workshops for 10+ times. on Automation & Science Engineering, Mobile Information Systems. He is also an associate editor of Neurocomputing, Integration Technology, and a guest editor of IEEE Trans. degree from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, in 2006. degrees from the University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, in 19, respectively, and the Ph.D. He is also the Founding Director of the Laboratory for Human Machine Control, SIAT. Jun Cheng is a Professor of Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, with expertise in computer visions, robotics and machine intelligence and control. Many of Bruce Lee's statements are derived from his own studies of various schools of philosophy and the martial arts, and are sometimes paraphrases of previous expressions by others which he wrote down for his own instruction into his own words.Prof. After the book's initial publication, additional passages were discovered to have been sourced from the works of D.T. Ohara Publications has acknowledged Edwin Haislet, Hugo and James Castello, Roger Crosnier and Julio Castello as original sources. Tao of Jeet Kune Do was compiled posthumously from Bruce Lee's personal notes, some of which were in turn copied from Bruce Lee's personal library of martial arts and philosophical books. Although Lee's material was utilized, it was not organized by him therefore Bruce Lee was not strictly its author. The book is attributed to Bruce Lee as his notes and work were used to compile the book. Lee's wife, Linda Lee Cadwell holds the copyright to the book. The book is dedicated to: The Free, Creative Martial Artist. Johnson, with Linda Lee, Dan Inosanto and other students of Bruce Lee helping him understand Jeet Kune Do well enough to editorialize and organize Lee's material into text. The "core writings" and various notes were put together in a logical fashion by various editors. Lee's untimely death changed the perspective of releasing the information that Bruce Lee had vacillated about. In 1975, after Bruce Lee's death, his widow Linda Lee Cadwell decided to make available the information her husband had collected. It was to be a guidebook, not a set of instructions or "How to" manual to learn martial arts. Lee's intent in writing the book was to record one man's way of thinking about the martial arts. He also vacillated about publishing his book as he felt that this work might be used for the wrong purposes. However, his film career and work prevented him from doing so. In 1971, it was Lee's intent to finish the treatise that he started during his convalescence. The combination of the "core set of writings" and the "disparate notes" would be known as the text Tao of Jeet Kune Do. Many of these notes were "sudden inspirations" which were incomplete and lacked any kind of a construct. Lee had also kept various notes throughout the development of his combat philosophy and these would become the disparate notes used in the book. Many of these writings were done during a single session which provided natural continuity. The bulk of these writings would become the "core set of writings". It was during his convalescence that he decided to compile a treatise on the system or approach to martial arts that he was developing he called it Jeet Kune Do. This was a very tiring and dispiriting time for Lee who was always very physically active. ![]() He was ordered by his doctors to wear a back brace for 6 months in order to recover from his injury. During this time he could not train in martial arts. The project for this book began in 1970 when Bruce Lee suffered a back injury during one of his practice sessions. Tao of Jeet Kune Do is a book expressing Bruce Lee's martial arts philosophy and viewpoints, published posthumously (after Bruce Lee's death in 1973). ![]()
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