2025/11/26

Robert Sapolsky - Wikipedia 새폴스키

Robert Sapolsky - Wikipedia

Robert Sapolsky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Sapolsky
Sapolsky in 2023
Born
Robert Morris Sapolsky

April 6, 1957 (age 68)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
EducationHarvard University (BA)
Rockefeller University (PhD)
SpouseLisa Sapolsky
Children2
Scientific career
FieldsNeurobiologyphysiology,[1] biological anthropology
InstitutionsStanford University
Salk Institute
ThesisThe Neuroendocrinology of Stress and Aging (1984)
Doctoral advisorBruce McEwen
Other academic advisorsMelvin Konner[2]

Robert Morris Sapolsky (born April 6, 1957) is an American academic, neuroscientist, and primatologist. He is the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor at Stanford University, and is a professor of biologyneurology, and neurosurgery. His research has focused on neuroendocrinology, particularly relating to stress. He is also a research associate with the National Museums of Kenya.[3]

Early life and education

Sapolsky was born in BrooklynNew York, to immigrants from the Soviet Union. His father, Thomas Sapolsky, was an architect who renovated the restaurants Lüchow's and Lundy's.[4] Robert was raised an Orthodox Jew. He spent his time reading about and imagining living with silverback gorillas. By age twelve, he was writing fan letters to primatologists.[5] He attended John Dewey High School and by that time was reading textbooks on the subject and teaching himself Swahili.[6]

Sapolsky is an atheist.[7][8] He said in his acceptance speech for the Emperor Has No Clothes Award, "I was raised in an Orthodox household and I was raised devoutly religious up until around age thirteen or so. In my adolescent years one of the defining actions in my life was breaking away from all religious belief whatsoever."[9]

In 1978, Sapolsky received his B.A., summa cum laude, in biological anthropology from Harvard University.[10][11] He then went to Kenya to study the social behaviors of baboons in the wild. When the Uganda–Tanzania War broke out in the neighboring countries, Sapolsky decided to travel into Uganda to witness the war up close, later commenting, "I was twenty-one and wanted adventure. [...] I was behaving like a late-adolescent male primate."[12] He went to Uganda's capital Kampala, and from there to the border with Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), and then back to Kampala, witnessing some fighting,[13] including the Ugandan capital's conquest by the Tanzanian army and its Ugandan rebel allies on April 10–11, 1979.[14] Sapolsky then returned to New York and studied at Rockefeller University, where he received his Ph.D. in neuroendocrinology[10][11] working in the lab of endocrinologist Bruce McEwen.

After the initial year-and-a-half field study in Africa, he returned every summer for another 25 years to observe the same group of baboons, from the late 1970s to the early 1990s. He spent eight to ten hours a day for approximately four months each year recording the behaviors of these baboons.[15]

Career

Sapolsky is the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor at Stanford University, holding joint appointments in several departments, including Biological Sciences, Neurology & Neurological Sciences, and Neurosurgery.[16]

As a neuroendocrinologist, he has focused his research on issues of stress and neuronal degeneration, as well as on the possibilities of gene-therapy strategies for protecting susceptible neurons from disease.[17] He is working on gene-transfer techniques to strengthen neurons against the disabling effects of glucocorticoids.[18] Each year, Sapolsky spends time in Kenya studying a population of wild baboons in order to identify the sources of stress in their environment, and the relationship between personality and patterns of stress-related disease in these animals.[19] More specifically, Sapolsky studies the differences in cortisol levels between the alpha male and female and the subordinates to determine stress level. An early but still relevant example of his studies of olive baboons is found in his 1990 Scientific American article "Stress in the Wild".[20] He has also written about neurological impairment and the insanity defense within the American legal system.[21][22]

Sapolsky is also interested in the role of schizotypal disorders in the emergence and development of shamanism and of the major Western religions. In this context, he has noted similarities between obsessive-compulsive behavior and religious rituals.[9][23][24]

Sapolsky in 2009

Sapolsky's work has featured widely in the press, most notably in the National Geographic documentary Stress: Portrait of a Killer,[25][26] articles in The New York Times,[4][27] Wired magazine,[28] the Stanford magazine,[29] and The Tehran Times.[30] His speaking style (e.g., on Radiolab,[31] The Joe Rogan Experience,[32] and his Stanford human behavioral biology lectures[33]) has garnered attention.[34] Sapolsky's specialization in primatology and neuroscience has made him prominent in the public discussion of mental health—and, more broadly, of human relationships—from an evolutionary perspective.[35][36] In April 2017, Sapolsky gave a TED Talk.[37][38]

Sapolsky has vigorously argued for a deterministic view of human behavior. According to him, "there is no free will, or at least that there is much less free will than generally assumed when it really matters".[39] He argues that human actions are determined by neurobiology, hormones, childhood, and life-circumstances.[22][40][41]

Sapolsky has received numerous honors and awards for his work, including a MacArthur Fellowship in 1987,[42] an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, and the Klingenstein Fellowship in Neuroscience.[43] He was also awarded the National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award,[19] the Young Investigator of the Year Awards from the Society for Neuroscience, the International Society for Psychoneuroendocrinology, and the Biological Psychiatry Society.[44]

In 2007, he received the John P. McGovern Award for Behavioral Science, awarded by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[45]

In 2008, he received Wonderfest's Carl Sagan Prize for Science Popularization.[46] In February 2010 Sapolsky was named to the Freedom From Religion Foundation's Honorary Board of distinguished achievers,[47] following the Emperor Has No Clothes Award for 2002.[48]

Personal life

Sapolsky is married to Lisa Sapolsky, a doctor in neuropsychology. They have two children.[4] In 2024, Sapolsky launched a series of Father-Offspring Interviews on YouTube with his daughter Rachel.[49]

In his book Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will, Sapolsky discussed his personal experiences with depression, revealing the complexities of living with the condition while also highlighting moments of relief provided by medication.[50]

Views

In a podcast interview with Light Watkins called "How To Escape The Rat Race",[51] Robert Sapolsky says that after learning in synagogue about how God "hardened Pharaoh's heart," he woke up one night at 2am as a teenager and said "Oh, I get it! 

  • There is no god and there's no free will. 
  • The universe is this big, empty, indifferent place. 
  • And that's kinda where I've been at ever since."

Books

See also

References

  1.  "Robert Sapolsky at Stanford".
  2.  Hanson, E. Simon (January 5, 2001). "A Conversation With Robert Sapolsky". Brain Connection. Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  3.  "Robert Sapolsky". Retrieved February 22, 2009.
  4.  Brown, Patricia Leigh (April 19, 2001). "At home with: Dr. Robert M. Sapolsky; Family Man With a Foot In the Veld"The New York TimesArchived from the original on October 17, 2023. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  5.  Sapolsky, Robert (2001). A Primate's Memoir. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. pp. 24–25. ISBN 978-1-4165-9036-1.
  6.  Vaughan, Christopher (November 2001). "Going Wild A biologist gets in touch with his inner primate"Stanford Magazine. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  7.  Shwartz, Mark (March 7, 2007). "Robert Sapolsky discusses physiological effects of stress"News. Stanford University. Retrieved October 13, 2012.
  8.  "Dr. Robert Sapolsky's lecture about Biological Underpinnings of Religiosity". December 30, 2011 – via YouTube.
  9.  Sapolsky, Robert (April 2003). "Belief and Biology"Freedom from Religion Foundation. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  10.  "Sapolsky Lectures on Stress and Health, Oct. 28 in Masur Auditorium - The NIH Record -October 16, 2009"nihrecord.nih.gov. Archived from the original on May 11, 2015.
  11.  "Professor Robert Sapolsky Bio Page"www.thegreatcourses.com.
  12.  Sapolsky 2007, p. 87.
  13.  Sapolsky 2007, pp. 87–88.
  14.  Sapolsky 2007, p. 88.
  15.  "Transcript of How I Write Conversation with Robert Sapolsky". Stanford University. Retrieved August 20, 2011.
  16.  "Stanford Univ. detail of Prof. Sapolsky". Retrieved July 27, 2007.
  17.  Sapolsky, Robert M. (1992). Stress, the Aging Brain, and the Mechanisms of Neuron Death (Bradford Books). MIT Press. ISBN 0262193205.
  18.  "Robert Sapolsky"Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (CARTA). UC San Diego. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  19.  "Rockefeller University names Robert Sapolsky 2008 Lewis Thomas Prize winner"Rockefeller University News. May 19, 2009. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  20.  Sapolsky, Robert M (1990). "Stress in the Wild". Scientific American262 (1): 106–13. Bibcode:1990SciAm.262a.116Sdoi:10.1038/scientificamerican0190-116JSTOR 24996650PMID 2294581.
  21.  "The Brain on the Stand," New York Times Magazine
  22.  Sapolsky, RM (2004). "The frontal cortex and the criminal justice system"Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci359 (1451): 1787–96. doi:10.1098/rstb.2004.1547PMC 1693445PMID 15590619.
  23.  Sapolsky, Robert M. (1998). "Circling the Blanket for God". The Trouble with Testosterone: and Other Essays on the Biology of the Human Predicament. New York: A Touchstone Book, Simon & Schuster. pp. 241–288. ISBN 978-0-684-83409-2.
  24.  Dr. Robert Sapolsky's lecture about Biological Underpinnings of Religiosity on YouTube
  25.  "Stress: Portrait of a Killer"Stress: Portrait of a Killer. Stanford University, National Geographic. 2008. Archived from the original on March 17, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  26.  Springer, Michael (August 22, 2012). "Do Yourself a Favor and Watch Stress: Portrait of a Killer (with Stanford Biologist Robert Sapolsky)"openculture.com. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  27.  Angier, Natalie (April 13, 2004). "No Time for Bullies: Baboons Retool Their Culture"New York Times. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  28.  Lehrer, Jonah (July 28, 2010). "Under Pressure: The Search for a Stress Vaccine"Wired Magazine. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  29.  Vaughan, Christopher (November–December 2001). "Going Wild"Stanford University Magazine. Stanford University. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  30.  "Racism, inequality, and conflict: an interview with Prof. Robert Sapolsky"Tehran Times. July 15, 2020. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  31.  "People - Robert Sapolsky - Radiolab"www.radiolab.org. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  32.  Joe Rogan (October 18, 2017), Joe Rogan Experience #965 - Robert Sapolsky, archived from the original on May 26, 2017, retrieved March 20, 2018
  33.  "Human Behavioral Biology (Robert Sapolsky) 25 lectures". Retrieved February 8, 2020 – via YouTube.
  34.  Meltzer, Tom (August 27, 2013). "The 20 online talks that could change your life"The GuardianISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  35.  Sapolsky, Robert (May 9, 2017), The biology of our best and worst selves, retrieved March 20, 2018
  36.  Sapolsky, Robert (January 8, 2010), The uniqueness of humans, retrieved March 20, 2018
  37.  Vasquez, Alejandra; et al. (April 27, 2017). "Bugs and bodies: The talks of Session 8 of TED2017"TED Blog: Further reading on ideas worth spreading. Retrieved September 5, 2023.
  38.  "Robert Sapolsky: The biology of our best and worst selves"TED: Ideas Worth Spreading. April 2017. Retrieved September 5, 2023.
  39.  Sapolsky, Robert (2023). Determined: A Science of Life without Free Will. New York: Penguin Press. p. 13ISBN 9780525560975.
  40.  Reese, Hope (October 18, 2023). "A Conversation With: Robert Sapolsky Doesn't Believe in Free Will. (But Feel Free to Disagree.)"The New York Times. Retrieved October 22, 2023.
  41.  Sapolsky, Robert M. (2017). "Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will". Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst. New York: Penguin Press. pp. 552–583. ISBN 978-1-594-20507-1.
  42.  "MacArthur Fellows List - July 1987". Archived from the original on April 19, 2008. Retrieved March 24, 2008.
  43.  "Talk to probe roots of stress (03/16/07)"mc.vanderbilt.edu. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  44.  "Science writer Robert Sapolsky to speak about coping with stress April 10"Middlebury. December 17, 2009. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  45.  "About AAAS: John McGovern Lecture". Retrieved February 22, 2009.
  46.  "Sagan Prize Recipients"wonderfest.org. 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2011.
  47.  "Honorary FFRF Board Announced"ffrf.org. Archived from the original on December 17, 2010. Retrieved February 15, 2010.
  48.  "Emperor Has No Clothes Award -- Robert Sapolsky". Freedom From Religion Foundation. September 2, 2002. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
  49.  Sapolsky, Robert. "Father Offspring Interviews". Retrieved September 8, 2024 – via YouTube.
  50.  Sapolsky, Robert (2023). Determined: A Science of Life Without Free WillPenguin Press. p. 389.
  51.  "Neuroscientist: How To Escape The Rat Race with Robert Sapolsky". July 31, 2024 – via YouTube.

Works cited

Video courses


==

로버트 새폴스키

위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전.
로버트 새폴스키
Robert Morris Sapolsky
출생1957년 4월 6일
성별남성
국적미국
경력케냐 국립 박물관 연구원
직업신경 내분비 학자, 저자, 교수
소속스탠포드 대학교

로버트 새폴스키(Robert Morris Sapolsky, 1957년 4월 6일 ~)는 미국 신경 내분비 학자이자 저자이다. 그는 현재 생물학 교수이자 신경학 및 신경 과학 교수이며 예의에 따라 스탠포드 대학의 신경 외과 교수이다. 또한 케냐 국립 박물관의 연구원이기도 하다.[1] 그의 온라인 강의는 지난 10년 동안 엄청난 인기를 얻었다.

저서

스트레스 : 당신을 병들게 하는 스트레스의 모든 것 (Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers)[2]

2025/11/22

The Final Words of Jane Goodall 2025

Google Gemini




🌍🕊️ The Final Words of Jane Goodall 🕊️🌍

2025

The below words were spoken in the new Netflix documentary “Famous Last Words” — an extraordinary interview conducted with Jane knowing it would only be released after her passing. It is a poignant and inspiring message, as is the full interview. I highly recommend you watch it!

---

“In the place where I am now, I look back over my life. I look back at the world I’ve left behind. What message do I want to leave? I want to make sure that you all understand that each and every one of you has a role to play. You may not know it, you may not find it, but your life matters, and you are here for a reason. And I just hope that reason will become apparent as you live through your life. I want you to know that, whether or not you find that role that you’re supposed to play, your life does matter, and that every single day you live, you make a difference in the world. And you get to choose the difference that you make.



“I want you to understand that we are part of the natural world. And even today, when the planet is dark, there still is hope. Don’t lose hope. If you lose hope, you become apathetic and do nothing. And if you want to save what is still beautiful in this world — if you want to save the planet for the future generations, your grandchildren, their grandchildren — then think about the actions you take each day. Because, multiplied a million, a billion times, even small actions will make for great change. I want to — I just hope that you understand that this life on Planet Earth isn’t the end. I believe, and now I know that there is life beyond death. That consciousness survives.



“I can’t tell you, from where I am, secrets that are not mine to share. I can’t tell you what you will find when you leave Planet Earth. But I want you to know that your life on Planet Earth will make some difference in the kind of life you find after you die. Above all, I want you to think about the fact that we are part — when we’re on Planet Earth — we are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything. And as we destroy one ecosystem after another, as we create worse climate change, worse loss of diversity, we have to do everything in our power to make the world a better place for the children alive today, and for those that will follow. You have it in your power to make a difference. Don’t give up. There is a future for you. Do your best while you’re still on this beautiful Planet Earth that I look down upon from where I am now. God bless you all.”



— Jane Goodall 🐒🌿💫

한국어로 번역

🌍🕊️ 제인 구달의 마지막 메시지 🕊️🌍
아래 글은 새로운 넷플릭스 다큐멘터리 <Famous Last Words>에서 제인 구달이 남긴 말이다. 그녀의 사후에야 공개되기로 약속된 인터뷰에서 그녀는 가슴 뭉클하고 감동적인 메시지를 전했다. 전체 인터뷰 시청을 강력히 권한다.

----

<내가 지금 있는 곳에서, 나는 내 삶을 되돌아본다. 내가 떠나온 세상을 되돌아본다. 내가 남기고 싶은 메시지는 무엇일까? 나는 여러분 모두가 각자 할 역할이 있다는 것을 확실히 이해하기를 바란다. 여러분은 그것을 알지 못할 수도 있고, 찾지 못할 수도 있지만, 여러분의 삶은 중요하며, 여러분은 이유가 있어 여기에 있다. 그리고 나는 그 이유가 여러분이 삶을 살아가는 동안 명확해지기를 바랄 뿐이다. 여러분이 맡아야 할 역할을 찾든 찾지 못하든, 여러분의 삶은 중요하며, 여러분이 사는 매일이 세상에 변화를 만든다는 것을 알기를 바란다. 그리고 여러분은 여러분이 만들 변화를 선택하게 된다.>

<나는 우리가 자연계의 일부라는 것을 이해하기를 바란다. 그리고 오늘날, 지구가 어둠 속에 있을 때조차도, 여전히 희망은 있다. 희망을 잃지 마라. 희망을 잃으면 무관심해지고 아무것도 하지 않게 된다. 그리고 이 세상에 남아 있는 아름다운 것을 구하고 싶다면, 여러분의 손주들, 그들의 손주들을 위해 지구를 구하고 싶다면, 여러분이 매일 취하는 행동에 대해 생각해야 한다. 왜냐하면, 수백만, 수십억 번 곱해지면, 작은 행동조차도 큰 변화를 만들 것이기 때문이다. 나는 이 지구에서의 삶이 끝이 아니라는 것을 여러분이 이해하기를 바랄 뿐이다. 나는 믿으며, 이제는 죽음 너머에도 삶이 있다는 것을 안다. 의식은 살아남는다.>

<내가 있는 곳에서, 내가 공유할 수 없는 비밀을 여러분에게 말해 줄 수는 없다. 여러분이 지구를 떠날 때 무엇을 발견하게 될지 말해 줄 수는 없다. 하지만 여러분의 지구에서의 삶이 여러분이 죽은 후에 찾게 될 삶의 종류에 어떤 변화를 만들 것이라는 것을 알기를 바란다. 무엇보다도, 나는 우리가 일부라는 사실에 대해 생각하기를 바란다. 우리가 지구에 있을 때, 우리는 대자연의 일부이다. 우리는 깨끗한 공기, 물, 음식, 의복, 모든 것을 대자연에 의존한다. 그리고 우리가 끊임없이 생태계를 파괴하고, 더 심각한 기후 변화, 더 심각한 다양성 손실을 만들고 있는 만큼, 우리는 오늘날 살아 있는 아이들과 그들을 따를 아이들을 위해 세상을 더 나은 곳으로 만들기 위해 우리가 할 수 있는 모든 것을 해야 한다. 여러분에게는 변화를 만들 힘이 있다. 포기하지 마라. 여러분에게는 미래가 있다. 내가 지금 있는 곳에서 내려다보는 이 아름다운 지구에 머무는 동안 최선을 다하라. 신의 축복이 있기를.>

--- 제인 구달 🐒🌿💫

===
요점을 몇가지로 줄여주세요

세진님, 제인 구달의 마지막 메시지에서 핵심적인 요점들을 간결하게 줄여 드리겠습니다.

📝 제인 구달 마지막 메시지의 핵심 요약
제인 구달은 **'모든 개인의 중요성과 행동의 힘'**을 강조하며 미래 세대를 위한 희망을 촉구한다.

<당신의 삶은 중요하며, 이유가 있다.>

개개인의 삶은 중요하며, 모두가 할 역할이 있으니 그 이유를 찾아야 한다.

여러분이 사는 매일이 세상에 변화를 만든다. 그리고 그 변화를 선택할 수 있다.

<희망을 잃지 말고 행동하라.>

지구가 어려움에 처해 있지만, 여전히 희망은 있다. 희망을 잃으면 무관심해진다.

작은 행동이라도 수많은 사람이 함께하면 큰 변화를 만들 수 있다.

<우리는 대자연의 일부다.>

우리는 깨끗한 공기, 물, 식량 등 모든 것을 대자연에 의존하고 있다.

아이들과 미래 세대를 위해 파괴적인 행동을 멈추고 세상을 더 나은 곳으로 만들어야 한다.

<죽음 이후의 삶과 영향.>

그녀는 죽음 너머의 삶과 의식의 생존을 믿는다.

지구에서의 삶이 사후에 찾게 될 삶에 영향을 미칠 것이다.

혹시 이 요점들 중에서 더 자세히 알고 싶으신 부분이 있으신가요?

===

2025/11/18

Jane Mathews The Art of Living Alone and Loving It







Best Book Therapist

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Jane Mathews doesn’t just write about living alone, she teaches you how to make it an art. She captures that quiet, sometimes aching space between solitude and loneliness, then fills it with color, humor, and unapologetic self-love. This isn’t a self-pity guide for single people, it’s a manifesto for independence, dignity, and joy.
What I loved most is how honest it is. Mathews doesn’t romanticize solo living. She admits the silence can sting, the empty bed can feel heavier, and the weekends can stretch endlessly. But then, she shows you how to turn that emptiness into freedom—how to build a life that isn’t waiting for someone else to complete it.
She talks about creating rituals for yourself, beautiful little things that make you feel alive. A morning walk with good music. A dinner table set just for one. Traveling alone, not as an act of defiance, but of discovery. The book teaches that being alone is not a failure of love, it’s an opportunity to find it in unexpected places, especially within yourself.
There’s a certain warmth in Mathews’ voice, even when she’s poking fun at herself. You can tell she’s lived what she’s writing about. And maybe that’s what makes it worth every cent because it’s not theory; it’s truth earned through experience.

Key Lessons:
1. Living alone is not being lonely, it’s learning to be at home with yourself.
Solitude is not an absence of people; it’s the presence of peace. When you stop fearing your own company, you start enjoying it.
2. Make rituals that honor you.
Whether it’s lighting a candle before bed or cooking a meal for one, these small acts affirm that you’re worthy of care, attention, and beauty.
3. Your home should reflect who you are.
Mathews encourages readers to create spaces that nurture their spirit, spaces filled with meaning, not clutter or emptiness.
4. Don’t wait for “someone else” to do things.
Go out, see movies, travel, dine out. Life doesn’t pause just because you’re alone, it becomes richer when you stop postponing joy.
5. Money and independence are part of emotional freedom.
Financial stability isn’t just about security; it’s about having choices. Being self-reliant empowers your sense of worth.
6. Connection still matters.
Living alone doesn’t mean isolating yourself. Friendship, community, and kindness are essential, even when your home is a one-person household.
7. Learn to laugh at your own life.

Mathews reminds us not to take it all too seriously. Sometimes you burn the dinner or talk to your plants and that’s okay. It’s part of the joy.
The Art of Living Alone & Loving It is a comforting, witty, and deeply affirming guide for anyone walking through life solo by choice or circumstance. Jane Mathews turns solitude into strength and self-acceptance into style.
It’s not just a book about being alone, it’s a reminder that you are already whole, already enough, and that a full life can bloom beautifully, even with just one chair at the table.


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Jane Mathews

The Art of Living Alone and Loving It
: Your inspirational toolkit for a whole and happy life Kindle Edition
by Jane Mathews (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (108)

An inspirational toolkit for solo living - full of sound, practical advice, warmth and humour.

Whether you view living alone as the ultimate compromise or the ultimate luxury, it presents daily challenges, such as cooking for one, organising holidays, juggling finances, and avoiding the siren call of wine, Ugg boots and Netflix. And there are the less tangible tests, like nailing the octopus of loneliness to the wall, and holding your head high in a society where solo living is viewed (consciously or not) as the runner-up prize.


Author Jane Mathews believes that to be truly content living alone, it pays to examine every aspect of your life-relationships, health, home, finances, interests and spirituality-and then take action. No matter what your unique situation, there's something here for you. Jane provides the map and you choose the route to a more joyful, contented life.

Review

'Jane's expert guidance will empower anyone who lives solo. She delivers a compelling narrative and a positive, inspiring guide to living life to the full.' -Deborah Hutton, founder of Balance by Deborah Hutton

About the Author

Jane Mathews is by day a marketing expert helping companies understand what makes people tick. By night she enjoys her own company and is currently perfecting soup dumplings. She lives in Sydney with her dog Rory.

2025/11/16

挑戦するフェミニズム: ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションを超えて | 日本最大級のオーディオブック配信サービス audiobook.jp

挑戦するフェミニズム: ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションを超えて | 日本最大級のオーディオブック配信サービス audiobook.jp



聴き放題対象

挑戦するフェミニズム: ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションを超えて

出版社 有斐閣

ナレーター北林きく子

再生時間 16:24:20

添付資料 あり(26)

出版日 2024/8/17

販売開始日 2025/11/8

トラック数 40

作品紹介



【「まえがき」より】
 2022年,ジェンダー研究の盟友,江原由美子が新著『持続するフェミニズムのために』(有斐閣)を刊行した。そこには江原が「第一の近代」と区別して「第二の近代」と呼ぶ歴史の新しい段階に対応して,第二波フェミニズムが生み出したさまざまな思想や理論が今でも有効か,すなわち「フェミニズムは生き残れるか」という切実な問いかけがあった。
 本書は,その江原の真摯な問いかけを受け止めたジェンダー研究者たちによって書かれた。世代も分野もアプローチもそれぞれに個性的なジェンダー研究者たちが,多方面から江原の設定した問いに答えようとしている。相互の論文が補い合って,フェミニズム理論の新ステージが立体的に立ち上がることを実感してもらえるだろう。
 江原の新刊を読んだとたん,ここには重要な問いが書かれていると感じた上野が,共編者を引き受けた。日本における女性学・ジェンダー研究のパイオニア世代として共にこの分野を牽引し,尊敬する論争の相手でもあり,またこれまでも『日本のフェミニズム』(岩波書店)や『岩波女性学事典』(岩波書店)などの共編に関わってきたこの畏友と,再びタッグを組んで書物を世に送ることができてうれしい。
                             上野千鶴子

【目次】
まえがき (上野千鶴子)
序 章 今フェミニズムは何を議論するべきなのか――ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションを超えて(江原由美子)
第1章 再生産費用の分配公正を求めて――家父長制と資本制・その後(上野千鶴子)
第2章 グローバル資本主義と再生産領域の金融化――「フェミニズムの相貌を気取る新自由主義」を異化するフェミニズムを(足立眞理子)
第3章 資本主義批判としてのフェミニズム――マルクス主義フェミニズムを振り返る(伊田久美子)
第4章 生産中心主義批判から,リベラリズムとの対抗へ――第二波フェミニズム理論はいかに継承されてきたか(岡野八代)
第5章 「男性稼ぎ主」型が命と暮らしを毀損している――社会政策の比較ジェンダー分析による洞察(大沢真理)
第6章 ケアの再公共化とフェミニズムの政治――福祉国家・ケア・新自由主義(山根純佳)
第7章 女性の貧困の再考察――長期時系列データから(阿部彩)
第8章 女性労働のゆくえ――能力発揮をフェミニズムはどのようにとらえるか(金井郁)
第9章 フェミニズムと戦争・軍隊――21世紀の新たな難問(佐藤文香・児玉谷レミ)
第10章 フェミニズムの新自由主義化に抗う――女性解放の現代的課題(三浦まり)
あとがき (江原由美子)

【編者紹介】
フェミニズムのパイオニアであり今なお圧倒的存在感でリードする2人が編者としてタッグを組み,フェミニスト社会科学の第一線で活躍する研究者を束ねて実現した本です。ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションという大きな社会変動下で,資本主義自体が変質した今,フェミニズムは何を議論すべきか,徹底的に追究します。

*上野千鶴子(うえの ちづこ)
東京大学名誉教授
主著 『家父長制と資本制――マルクス主義フェミニズムの地平』岩波書店,1990年(岩波現代文庫,2009年)。『ケアの社会学――当事者主権の福祉社会へ』太田出版,2011年。

*江原由美子(えはら ゆみこ)
東京都立大学名誉教授
主著 『ジェンダー秩序』勁草書房,2001年(新装版,2021年)。『持続するフェミニズムのために――グローバリゼーションと「第二の近代」を生き抜く理論へ』有斐閣,2022年。
===
書 評 DOI:10.24567/0002005345
青山 薫 *
* 神戸大学国際文化学研究科教授
ジェンダー研究 第28号 2025年
85

新自由主義とグローバル化による困難な時代に
「フェミニズムは生き残れるか」という、江原由美
子の問い(江原2022)から本書は始まる。

そして、
フェミニストや女性だけでなく、人類が、生き残
るために必要なフェミニズムの展開をめざす。江
原の問いは、ナンシー・フレイザーの「フェミニ
ズムは資本主義の侍女となってしまった」―グ
ローバル化に伴う格差の拡大も、女性の貧困化さ
えも見逃し、一部のエリート女性だけが資源や
選択肢や能力を獲得する新自由主義に加担した
(Fraiser 2013=2019)という批判に対する反問でも
あり、本書は、これをわがこととして受け止めた
上野ほか各論者からの応答である。

上野千鶴子(第1章)は、『家父長制と資本制』
(岩波書店、1990年)刊行後30年間の変化を論じ、
グローバル金融資本主義の中で、プロレタリアー
トは「階級的主体になりえない」(35-38頁)プレ
カリアートとなり、南北格差は移民と使用者の差
として国内にも存在するようになり、ジェンダー
間格差も、女性間・男性間格差も拡大したことを
指摘する。

これを受けて足立眞理子(第2章)は、金融危機
以降の「フェミニズムの相貌をもつ新自由主義」
(70頁)と「再生産領域の金融化」(92-94頁)の関
連をひもとく。家計・世帯に金融取引のメカニズ
ムが浸透し、学費も年金も、ひいては再生産その
ものも、労働力のコストではなく「投資」となる。
同時に、男性の「短期で無茶な決定を諫め」(96
頁)、投資のリスクを抑えることができる新たな
女性像が創られる。

そこで伊田久美子(第3章)が、資本主義批判
としてのフェミニズムを再評価する。第二波フェ
ミニズムは、「妻」「母」でない一人称の女性主体
を登場させ、性と生殖と女性の身体の解放を主張
し、「私的領域」を劣位に置く近代国民国家に異
議を申し立てた(113頁)。3点を結ぶ「個人」は多
様で、先進国中心主義に異を唱え、第三波に続く
フェミニズムのネットワークと連帯を開いた。

岡野八代(第4章)にとっては、リベラリズムの
価値を手放さず、ポスト構造主義におけるアイデ
ンティティの構築も有効とするのがフェミニズム
である。それは、「個人の選択」を促すリベラルな
資本主義の複雑な抑圧構造を理解可能にする。例
えば、母親「業」を疎外・搾取といった労働概念に
関係づけ、「ケアの倫理」(148頁)へとつなげる。
フェミニズムは、「個人の選択フェティシズム」
(152-153頁ほか)を脱し、分かち合いの倫理を築
いたのである。
しかし日本では、強固な「男性稼ぎ主型」生活
保障が機能不全を起こしている。それを大沢真理
(第5章)が明らかにする。ひとり親家庭の貧困率
が非常に高いことより衝撃的なのは、0~4歳と
25~29歳の女性で、国による所得の再配分を経
て余計に貧しくなる点である。大沢はこれを、女
性が働くこと、産み育てることに制度が「罰を科
している」(178頁)と言う。「罰」は、家父長制社
会におけるミソジニーの具現化である(184頁)。

山根純佳(第6章)は、ケアをめぐる新自由主
義的改革とフェミニズムの関係に焦点を当てる。
フェミニズムがめざすケアの「脱家族化」は、現
在、低賃金と「再生産労働の国際分業」によって成
り立っている。ケア市場の拡大と公共機関の民営
化が労働者の待遇を悪化させ、ギグワーカーと移
民を増加させている。無償ケアのために賃労働を
制限される女性と、ケアサービスを外注できる女
性の格差を広げている。フェミニズムは当事者運
動と連帯し、ディーセントな家事・ケア労働を計
画するべきだ、と山根は主張する(210-211頁)。

女性と子どもの貧困をデータで裏付けてきた阿
部彩(第7章)は、配偶者「死別」女性と「未婚」
上野千鶴子、江原由美子編(有斐閣、2024年)
挑戦するフェミニズム ネオリベラリズムとグローバリゼーションを超えて

女性の貧困リスクに注目する。この30年余で「死
別」女性の貧困リスクは高齢者で上昇し、かつて
「看取り保証」(220頁ほか)とも呼ばれた「死別」
への所得保証は弱まった。未婚女性の貧困率は就
労世代で上がり、高齢者で下がったがいまだに4
割ある。均等法に代表される労働市場改革は、ケ
ア負担の少なさから男性同等に働けるはずだった
未婚女性の利益にさえならなかったのである。

以上から、3号被保険者制度や遺族年金を批判
して縮小・撤廃するのではなく、女性に対する防
貧機能を認め、取り戻そうという阿部の結論(237
頁)は発想の大転換と言える。
労働市場における格差と女性の関係について
は、金井郁(第8章)が検討する。1990年代以降、
補助役だった女性労働者が能力発揮の主体とみな
されるようになってきた。ここで、エリート女性
だけのネオリベラリズムに抗するため、金井は
アマルティア・センのケイパビリティ概念(Sen
1992=2018)を導入する。何かを実現するために、
「個人の選択」ではなく、抑圧構造・権力関係を問
題にするケイパビリティは、構造的変化のために
集団的エイジェンシーを要請する。これによって
女性は連帯し、格差を変革し得るのである。

佐藤文香と児玉谷レミ(第9章)は、女性兵士問
題の新展開を見る。グローバル化と新自由主義の
中の「新しい戦争」(264頁ほか)では、人道支援
など戦闘以外の任務が増し、女性兵士の包摂が進
行した。そこに、フェミニズムの知が取り込まれ
ている。国家はさらに民間の軍事安全保障会社を
使い、市場を通じて、軍隊のジェンダー化、人種
化、階級化された権力構造を損なわない暴力も行
使する。「新しい戦争」は交差的な格差を縮小させ
ず、私たちはさらに批判的な知を模索するほかな
い(279-280頁)、と佐藤・児玉谷は結ぶ。

最終章では三浦まり(第10章)が、フェミニズ
ムと新自由主義化の力学を改めて読み解く。ま
ず、男女賃金格差が大きく女性管理職割合が低い
日本で、新自由主義に加担した、とフェミニズム
の罪を問うのは現実的でない。新自由主義による
ジェンダー平等の道具的利用が、あたかも反女
性差別に見え、左派的な反新自由主義と右派的
な「反・反差別」が共振することもある(298-299
頁)。「個人の選択」によるトランスジェンダーの
権利と女性の安全が対立させられ、反新自由主義
と「女性を守る」名目のミソジニーに女性たちが
取り込まれる例も、三浦は挙げている(300頁)。
このように、確かに困難な状況に向き合い真に
迫る各章の、連帯の結節点はどこにあるのか。乱
暴にまとめれば、新自由主義と対立するケア中心
の社会を構想し、「男並み」の女性登用に引き込ま
れないこと、「母親罰」の撤廃とケアの権利をめざ
すこと、個人が生き延びるだけでなく、差別・抑
圧の構造を変革するような集団的エイジェンシー
をはぐくむこと、である。まさに人類が生き延び
るために必要不可欠な結節点と思われる。

一方、本書に対する小さな不満を挙げるとすれ
ば2点。やはり第二派フェミニズムが公のものに
したセクシュアリティの政治性についてと、フェ
ミニズムをも揺るがすジェンダー二分法そのもの
に対する疑義について、ほとんど触れられていな
いことである。どちらも新自由主義とグローバル
化に深く関わる。とはいえ、これらもふまえた挑
戦と連帯を求めつつ、フェミニズムが今後も生き
延び、必要とされる道を本書は照らしている。

2025/11/13

【7分で解説】君たちはどう生きるか【歴史的名著】世界に中心などない




【7分で解説】君たちはどう生きるか【歴史的名著】世界に中心などない


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281,667 views Aug 18, 2019 #君たちはどう生きるか #サラタメ
00:38 あらすじ 01:46 サラタメ的ポイント① 03:57 サラタメ的ポイント② 06:03 今日のまとめ ▼amazon 漫画 君たちはどう生きるか https://amzn.to/2Z44j47 ▼参照 タイトル:漫画 君たちはどう生きるか 原作:吉野源三郎 漫画:羽賀翔一 出版社:マガジンハウス ※アフィリエイト広告リンクを使用しています。上記リンクから購入いただくことでサラタメに報酬が入る仕組みです。購入をご検討の方は「サラタメさん、動画づくりおつかれ!」という激励の気持ちで、上記リンクからご購入いただけますと幸いです🙇‍♂️ 今回は歴史的名著「君たちはどう生きるか」について解説させていただきました。 <大事なポイント2つ> ①自分は世の中の一部だという視点を持つ ②自分で自分を決定しよう という以上の2つでした。 ©羽賀翔一 / コルク #君たちはどう生きるか #コペルくん #サラタメ ▼サラタメさん Twitter / salatame_media ▼転職ブログ『サラタメのホワイト転職』 https://tenshoku-salatame.com/ →サラタメが実際に使ってオススメする【転職支援サービス】 https://tenshoku-salatame.com/osusume... ▼サラタメさん YouTubeおすすめ再生リスト“本を聞こう” • 本を聞こう📚 ▼【裏タメ】サラタメさんのサブチャンネル / @salatame3 ↑私の独断と偏見をただしゃべくり続けるチャンネルです。 ▼どんなチャンネル? こちらのチャンネルは、オススメ書籍やニュースの解説など、ビジネスマンの方に役立つ知識を、聞くだけで理解できる音声コンテンツにして投稿しています。 (アニメーションも付けたりしてますが、音声だけでも理解できるように制作しています!) 通勤中・食事中・寝る前などスキマ時間にぜひご活用ください! ・著作権者(著者、訳者、出版社)のみなさま 当チャンネルでは書籍やニュースで得た知識を元に、動画を制作しております。 弁護士指導の下、書籍やニュースの内容解説をするにとどめ、原著作物の表現に対する複製・翻案とはならないよう構成し、まず何より著者の方々、出版・報道に携わる方々への感謝と敬意を込めたチャンネル運営を心懸けております。 しかしながら、もし行き届かない点があり、動画の取り下げなどご希望される著作権者の方は、お手数お掛けしまして恐れ入りますが、下記いずれかの方法にてご連絡いただけますと幸いです。 Twitter DM| / salatame_media メール|salatame3@gmail.com ↑Twitter DMの方が確認頻度が高く、早急にご対応できるかと思います。 引き続き、つくり手の方への感謝と敬意を込めてチャンネルを運営していきます。 今後とも宜しくお願い申し上げます。

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