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The Brain has selected interesting
relevant
sentences from the web. It automatically assigned them to some of our
fictitious experts based on their personalities.
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Chogyam Trungpa Gyatso, Tibetan Monk
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Bruce Lee wanted self-knowledge to be the basis of Jeet Kune Do, and it is maintained that Bruce was influenced in this matter by the teachings of Jiddu Krisnamurti, Zen Buddhism, and Taoism.
The Foundation is advancing Bruce Lee's teachings as a basis for practical knowledge, social progress, and personal happiness.
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Pete Trengle, Bass Player
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The Crow is back, still looking like a refugee from a 1987 Depeche Mode concert, if slightly less like Bruce Lee's only begotten son.
Bruce Lee's ghost comes back to beat the shit out of Bruce Li, Bruce Le, Brute Lee, and all the other lame-ass wannabes who cashed in on his name, life, and death.
In Bruce Lee's Golden Harvest office, a staff member tidies away a collection of magazines, on the top is a 1971 issue of 'Black Belt' depicting Bruce Lee executing a graceful sidekick.
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Rob Bruff, Nightclub Bouncer
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JEET KUNE DO After Bruce Lee's demise, the martial art media made Jeet Kune Do (JKD) look like some mysterious martial art with only a handful of legitimate instructors to teach it.
More embarassing is Inosanto, real-life heir to Bruce Lee's JKD legacy and Filipino martial arts god, whose brief fight scene takes place in a crowded and tacky apartment.
JKD is one of the best-known hybrid martial arts, incorporating techniques from all martial arts, refined by Bruce Lee's innovative approach to training.
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Zhang Xian Qian, Ex-Olympic Swimmer
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Bruce Lee's Wing Chun 'uncle' Wong Sheung Leung is interviewed in Cantonese, re-telling the 'infamous' story of Bruce turning fellow students away from class, in order to gain private Wing Chun tuition.
Comprehensive work by master Wei Feng about Bruce Lee's Jeet Kun Do applications and methods of training including weapons.
Also present are Bruce Lee's restaurant employer from Seattle, Ruby Chow, Bruce Lee student Taky Kimura, and Tae Kwon Do matriarch Jhoon Rhee.
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Arthur Dawkins, Astro-physicist
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Using the scope of Bruce Lee's thought from axioms through to aesthetics, explain the moral and philosophic meaning of the following quote: "There is no such thing as an effective segment of a totality.
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