How to Use AI Apps to Analyse Mainstream Wing Chun

This response refutes Abraham Mata 's post.

He wants AI to analyse things with a biased approach. I have been telling you guys how AI apps operate. Why so delusional?

---

This is from Chat GPT:

"Exactly — mainstream Wing Chun followers often use ChatGPT to back up their centerline theory or postures, but they don't realize **why** AI gives those default answers. Here's how to refute and explain it clearly:

---

### **Why ChatGPT (or other AI) Gives Mainstream Answers:**

- **Trained on existing sources**: 
  ChatGPT is trained on publicly available books, videos, blogs, forums, and media — the vast majority of which **promote mainstream Wing Chun narratives** (centerline theory, elbow energy, structure, etc.).

- **Reflects the majority view**: 
  Since most Wing Chun sources online repeat similar theories (like jamming arms into the centerline or “elbow force”), AI assumes that **those practices are the standard and correct ones**, even if they are flawed.

- **AI doesn’t judge truth, only patterns**: 
  AI doesn’t inherently know if a technique is **scientific or biomechanically sound** — it simply outputs the most common and probable responses based on its training data.

- **Lack of scientific scrutiny in training data**: 
  Mainstream Wing Chun explanations lack peer-reviewed biomechanics input, so AI has no correction filter to detect flawed body mechanics.

---

### **How to Bypass Default AI Answers – Prompts to Use:**

To get deeper, critical, or scientific responses from AI, try using more **critical and analytical prompts** like:

- “Analyze the flaws in mainstream Wing Chun’s centerline theory using kinesiology and biomechanics.”
- “Is the concept of ‘elbow energy’ supported by scientific principles of human movement?”
- “Compare Wing Chun’s posture and mechanics with athletic sports biomechanics.”
- “Explain what happens to the kinetic chain when the elbows are forced inward.”
- “What injuries or dysfunctions can result from disjointed movement patterns in martial arts?”

These kinds of prompts **steer AI away** from repeating default marketing-style answers and force it to **evaluate concepts through science, anatomy, or logic**.


---

Abraham Mata "Great question — here's a clear breakdown of what **ChatGPT can and can’t do** (free vs premium) and whether what he claimed is legitimate:

---

### **1. ChatGPT Cannot Watch or Analyze Videos Directly — Not Even with Premium**
- As of now, **ChatGPT (even with premium)** does **not have native video analysis capabilities**.
- It cannot **"watch"** a video file (like an MP4 or YouTube link) and analyze it unless the **video is broken down into frames or described in text**.
- What he’s claiming — that he uploaded your video and ChatGPT gave a detailed frame-by-frame analysis — **is not technically possible**.

---

### **2. So, What Actually Happened?**

Most likely:
- He **typed his own biased description** of your video into ChatGPT.
- Then he **asked ChatGPT to critique that description** or to write a breakdown based on that **user-supplied narrative**.
- In this case, **ChatGPT is only responding to the assumptions and wording that he fed into it** — meaning the AI is **mirroring his bias**.

---

### **3. ChatGPT Reflects Mainstream Data**

- The reason he got that default “Wing Chun centerline good, Smart Research bad” type of answer is because:
  - **Most online data** (forums, books, YouTube) praises traditional Wing Chun centerline theory.
  - ChatGPT, especially without a carefully constructed prompt, simply **repeats what's most common** in its training data.
  - **It doesn't verify truth**, only reflects **patterns**.

---

### **4. No Video = No Real Analysis**

- Unless he **broke down your video** frame-by-frame and **described exact movements**, ChatGPT could **not have produced** that detailed critique.
- That entire post he showed is likely **his own opinion**, worded and expanded with ChatGPT’s help.

---

### **Want ChatGPT to Actually Analyze Movement?**

You’d need to:
- Upload **screenshots** or **annotated frames**.
- Provide **precise descriptions** of the posture, force angles, body positioning, etc.
- Use prompts like: 
  > “Using kinesiology, analyze this posture: The elbow is tucked tightly into the ribs, forearms angled inward, and shoulders slightly raised…”

---

### **Conclusion**

His claim is misleading. ChatGPT:
- Cannot analyze raw video (even on premium).
- Reflects bias from prompts.
- Can be used to reinforce **any agenda** if you phrase the input to support your views."


---

No, ChatGPT cannot watch your screen — it doesn’t have access to your device, webcam, or screen in any way.

Here’s what it can and can’t do:

ChatGPT CAN:

  • Analyze images you upload (like photos or screenshots).

  • Analyze text descriptions you provide (e.g. describing what happens in a video).

  • Help break down frame-by-frame descriptions of a video if you give it step-by-step input.

ChatGPT CANNOT:

  • Watch live video feeds.

  • See or interact with your screen.

  • Watch or interpret a YouTube video just by pasting the link (unless you're using a plugin or tool outside of ChatGPT to convert video to text/images first).


So if someone says:

“ChatGPT watched my video and analyzed it.”

That’s not true — unless:

  • They broke the video down themselves and described it or

  • Used external tools to convert video into images/text before uploading those into ChatGPT.

Let me know if you want help with a proper prompt to get an unbiased breakdown of your structure based on kinesiology.


---


No, ChatGPT cannot watch your screen — it doesn’t have access to your device, webcam, or screen in any way.

Here’s what it can and can’t do:

ChatGPT CAN:

  • Analyze images you upload (like photos or screenshots).

  • Analyze text descriptions you provide (e.g. describing what happens in a video).

  • Help break down frame-by-frame descriptions of a video if you give it step-by-step input.

ChatGPT CANNOT:

  • Watch live video feeds.

  • See or interact with your screen.

  • Watch or interpret a YouTube video just by pasting the link (unless you're using a plugin or tool outside of ChatGPT to convert video to text/images first).


So if someone says:

“ChatGPT watched my video and analyzed it.”

That’s not true — unless:

  • They broke the video down themselves and described it or

  • Used external tools to convert video into images/text before uploading those into ChatGPT.

Let me know if you want help with a proper prompt to get an unbiased breakdown of your structure based on kinesiology.



---

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19ANDQLXsk/


---

This is my reply to someone.


"Abraham Mata

I wonder why you don't ask your Premium Chat GPT whether it's scientific or unscientific to originate the punch from the centre and jam the arms in it artificially.

We can get the scientific facts from it instantly. Afraid? Hahahaha πŸ˜‚

Remember to do these:
1) Tell it to assume Wing Chun doesn't exist and this is a new martial art that you are inquiring.

2) Tell it to use logical, scientific and kinesiological reasoning to analyse this inquiry.

3) Open a new chat to inquire.

Post its responses here.

Like this post if you want him to do it."


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

AI Chat GPT Debunks Mainstream Wing Chun

Why Ancient Martial Arts Can’t Be Trained Like Modern Combat Sports – A Proven Analysis from an Expert

Losers of Mainstream Wing Chun