GonzoGamer said:
I know what you mean but Jeet Kun Do is only the most recent martial art I've trained extensively in (that includes aggressive things like Karate and defensive things like Iron Shirt: and I still look for new things to learn in those disciplines) and I think for most people's needs (I don't think most people who train for practical reasons enjoy martial arts as much as you or I do) it's probably (by it's nature) the most practical method, especially if you study the philosophy behind it and have a good teacher who will help you find your strengths and adapts Jeet Kun Do to your needs.
I'm not saying Jeet Kun Do is the perfect martial art (just practical) because it can't be; it's meant to be constantly imperfect and constantly growing as more practitioners bring more disciplines and techniques in a futile but necessary attempt to perfect it.
I misunderstood. We're in a thread about the most "practical" martial art, which usually implies "what should I take up today, so I can kick ass the quickest", that was what I was responding to, so my assumption was that you were talking JKD as your first training, which somewhat weakens the concepts (in my understanding, I don't train in it).
My point is that in terms of practical applications, it would all basically be equivalent. If we assume practical means "would stand up in a bar/street fight", then any martial art would be sufficient, with different styles good at different things. Any of the hybrid styles (Silat, Jeet Kun Do, Krav Maga, Brazillian Juijutsu) are going to be more balanced, but have the deficiency of less specialization.
Unless we're assuming we're gonna get into a fight against fifteen armed, well-trained, assassins, most of the specializations are pretty moot. Aikido is focused on grappling, but has enough training in distanced combat that unless you're fighting a trained opponent, you won't notice a difference. My entire point was that someone should pick a style with a specialization they're comfortable with. If you want to grapple, go with Sambo, Aikido, or Silat). For mid-range combat (close enough for fists/elbows/knees, but not grappling) go with Krav Maga, Muay Thai, or Shotokan. For long-range (mostly defensive "wait for them to attack and roll with it"), go with Judo, Jui-Jutsu, BJJ, or Jeet Kun Do.
Obviously that's not a full list of all possible styles, but you get the idea. Most street fights won't last at all long if you're at all trained. If you're fighting a trained opponent, it's about who makes a mistake first, and whether the other guy can capitalize on it.
Edit: can we please stop talking about the "viciousness" of a style as a point in its favor? Just because a style isn't trained in terms of breaking people at all opportunities doesn't mean it lacks the capability, or that people would restrain themselves in a life-or-death combat situation. I've trained in Shotokan, and a little in Aikido, and in both cases I've been told "if it comes down to it, here's how to use what you've learned to break someone if necessary".