Philosophy

I-House Lecture

[Lunchtime Lecture] Toward a People-friendly Society —Understanding Anxiety in Adolescents

Share

Index

  • *The program featured on this page has concluded.

Lecturer: Ueda Noriyuki
(Professor, Liberal Arts Center, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Date: Thursday, February 20, 2014, 12:15-1:30 pm (Doors open at 11:45 am)
Venue: Kabayama-Matsumoto Room, International House of Japan
Language: Japanese (without English interpretation)
Admission: 1,000 yen (Students: 500 yen, IHJ members: Free)
(Reservation required, seating: 70) *Lunch is NOT included.

Almost three years have passed since the March 11 Tohoku earthquake. In reality, more than 30,000 people are committing suicide in Japan almost every year, more than the total number of missing and dead from the quake. Dr. Ueda stresses the importance of turning this “society of anxiety,” in which many people feel adrift and unsupported, into a “society of healing.”
What will be the foundations of relief or trust in this society full of anxiety, which has been going on since even before the quake? Dr. Ueda will talk about the keys for creating a people-friendly society, analyzing the roots of anxiety in adolescents as well as the role of adults by making comparison with cases overseas.

Lecturer

Professor, Liberal Arts Center, Tokyo Institute of Technology

Ueda Noriyuki

Cultural Anthropologist. Doctor of Medicine. Dr. Ueda conducted fieldwork on folk religion in Sri Lanka from 1986 and put forward a concept of iyashi (healing) in Japan. He comments in the media on various issues of modern society. From 2005 to 2006, he gave lectures titled “Can Japanese Buddhism Survive? The Resurgence of Traditional Temples Amidst Contemporary Problems” at Stanford University. Recently he is involved in the renaissance of Japanese Buddhism; he met the 14th Dalai Lama in 2006 and their discussions were published. His book Ikiru Imi (The Meaning of Living; Iwanami Shinsho, 2005) was the most cited literature in university entrance examinations for more than 40 universities in 2006. His books include Kakusei no Nettowāku (Network of Awareness; Katatsumuri Sha, 1989), Gambare Bukkyō! (Get Up, Buddhism!; NHK Publishing, 2004) and Jihi no Ikari: Shinsaigo wo Ikiru Kokoro no Manejimento (Anger from Mercy: Mind Management in Post-Quake Life; Asahi Shimbun Publications, 2011).

I-House LectureI-House Lecture

Archives

Program

I-House Lecture

Philosophy

International Conferences

View all archivesView all archives

Related Programs

Arts & Design IHJ Cultural Lobby

Our orderly ways of life have been disrupted in many places around the world, notably in Ukraine and Gaza, and there is little prospect of an early recovery. The issues modern society must consider, s...

Intellectual Dialogue

Arts & Design Architalk: Seeing the World through Architecture

I-House boasts a building constructed under the collaboration of three prominent modern Japanese architects, and from its inauguration has been receiving guests and members from the field of architect...

Return to search for activities and research contentReturn to search for activities and research content