21 The Origin of Sports

来源:  日期:2006年04月20日 00:56:22  阅读 次  作者:  评论  划词  进入论坛
   
When did sport begin? If sport is, in essence, play, the claim might be made that sport is much older than humankind, for , as we all have observed, the beasts play. Dogs and cats wrestle and play ball games. Fishes and birds dance. The apes have simple, pleasurable games. Frolicking infants, school children playing tag, and adult arm wrestlers are demonstrating strong, transgenerational and transspecies bonds with the universe of animals - past, present, and future. Young animals, particularly, tumble, chase, run wrestle, mock, imitate, and laugh (or so it seems) to the point of delighted exhaustion. Their play, and ours, appears to serve no other purpose than to give pleasure to the players, and apparently, to remove us temporarily from the anguish of life in earnest.
 Some philosophers have claimed that our playfulness is the most noble part of  our basic nature. In their generous conceptions, play harmlessly and  experimentally permits us to put our creative forces, fantasy, and imagination  into action. Play is release from the tedious battles against scarcity and  decline which are the incessant, and inevitable, tragedies of life. This is a  grand conception that excites and provokes. The holders of this view claim  that the origins of our highest accomplishments ---- liturgy, literature, and  law ---- can be traced to a play impulse which, paradoxically, we see most  purely enjoyed by young beasts and children. Our sports, in this rather happy,  nonfatalistic view of human nature, are more splendid creations of the  nondatable, transspecies play impulse.
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