字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント wife's joining us now is Daniel Goleman he's the many times bestselling author love books including emotional intelligence and the author of the brand new book focus the hidden driver excellence Daniel great to have you on the program how are you yeah I'm happy to be here I hope I am here you are here we are here they pay I have no idea I'll what that glitch was about but I guess that's a factor a modern life which is a significant factor in your new book focus I in this book you're talking about a basically as more and more research emerges on the importance I love the qualities of focus in our lives in our personal lives in our professional lives and obviously we're at a time where as our understanding of the significance the focus is sort of emerging in heightening were bombarded I by the kinda fax a modern life which can be very distracting so I'm just wondering if you could explain that kinda dichotomy and and also the yet exactly the reason I decided to write a book now because I think attention is a mental capacity under siege a never before we had so many distractions and distractors built into to where we work for example I i I'm right where I work on a computer and if I want to research something it's several seductively easy to go to the well have been coated with called Google Scholar I can see any academic article but to get there I have to go through a web page are presents me with every news story the day and I'm a news junkie and I'm a journalist so you know before I know what I'm lost in what's happening in washington or what's happening in turkey or syria or you know it goes on and on and a that's the story of our lives now we're it gets it the technology is getting in the way of our ability to do what we want when we want and to connect with people you know you go to a restaurant is a couple with dinner in the both looking at their phones do it a different reality that's that's why I was so important right about attention its pariah it is and how to use them well what are the varieties attention and focus well them you know as I got into the scientific literature on a attention in our new understanding because of our billy the image to brain wall people why using different kind of attention which shows that they have different circuit I realize that there's a lot of varieties others for example orienting response there's a a new 6 second web site is called flying and is a crime normally popular but significant fair sure and what those little a segments on finer doing is connected is triggering the orienting response which wanted to look at whatever the new and novel but the warning response works against are concentrated focus which is where we get work done you know our where we think our best we remember things are best we can neck things well we plan with make good decisions with we learn new material it takes staying focused and staying focused in turn is under siege by distractions and and wondering of it mind wandering who needs you know I'm who needs an app for your attack our minds are wired to wander off anyway about fifty percent of the time reminder elsewhere and it turns out that mind wandering is useful if you try to come up with some creative solution that's the time we're gonna get new inside but one who try to get our work done it's not so useful so I I just felt it was helpful to understand the different kind of attention how to use them when to use them so it's really interesting on again it's that a little bit more so they're these two types attention your highlighting their and one is and I think when we hear the word focus that's usually where we go we think I love I'm just gonna shut everything else out may get done what's right in front to me I'm gonna you know finish this article I'm gonna you know take this run-up to have this conversation and/or you know or do this monotonous work whatever the case may be and that's one thing and that's clearly under siege for the reasons you outlined and then on the other hand there's this other party the tension that you're talking about where our minds need to wander and be flexible on kinda grays and that's where creativity emerges from and it strikes me that even though technologies are so distracting in some ways technologies are also distracting us from that kinda open awareness to its practices general distracted the compelling offer to pay attention to what they wanted to hear one knowing you know and read tho I think we need to be a make more effort these days to strengthen our dental flexibility and capacity than there are ways to do it I'm now in Africa to teaching kids basically a lead fundamental GM you know it's me if you go to the German you lift weights every time you will have to wait and every repetition strength that muscle a bit more the same is true with the muscle love attention if you can I've been in the second-grade classroom in Spanish Harlem really down and out party Manhattan the kids their live in the projects next door but the class is very calm unclear the reason is that every day they do this attention to drink near where but the second-graders they have a little stuffed animal we find a place to lie down put it on there Tommy and has a tummy rises the count 1-2 three on the in breast and as falls 123 on the upper it away strengthening the muscle for the 10th time in a record that is Sam knobs are going to I can all you had a breakout year absolutely but I think the tickets got to the point where we need to help or two to get better at it yes so thats so that's an interesting because it does seem like what your book is highlighting obviously that there's this kind of the explosion interest in things like mindfulness meditation yoga a on all these different ways that people are kinda trying to figure out how do I regain some kind of composure and control over the kind of madness a modern life so I guess that makes sense yeah exactly in mindfulness and all these methods like yoga me help the body physiologically so you're actually better able to come home unclear which is the optimal state for anything and you know I'm a big advocate a making these this kind skill training available to everybody now and the end that's passing you would say that there's like a real power this is the kind of cognitive emotional parallel physical fitness and that's a good way to think that I'm sorry I didn't catch that closure I that analogy you were saying using a kind of mental training or mental gymnastics it makes me think of two things that one at that in some ways we can start thinking of these things I as as really we all kind of understand the need for physical fitness so maybe we need to kind of have an understanding unlike attention and focus fitness your well I don't think it's time for me to look at this and you know they're other kinds of attention that we need today I summer them come under the framework up emotional intelligence wouldn't have written about years one is self-awareness being able to tune in to what's going on inside as to sawyer responsible feelings in get in touch with our got sensible you know what's the best thing I can do now is what I'm about to do in keeping with my sensible purposes meaning and ethics in you know it's a self-awareness is coming over ethical writer in our allies and lord knows we need that it also turns out to be key to keeping ourselves home in distress for being able to recover quickly from getting upset which is a definition resilience then there's another kind which i think is also wonder assortment embassy being able to text into the people in sense how they feel with the help they see the world but they may need from us you know just all fashion concern is based on first missing people then empathizing seeing what's going on in their world and then if there's something that we can do to help them being predisposed absolutely in and I think that that's actually been a real the move your work for a long time is kinda taking qualities that maybe you know people might the jaw really dismissive is being you know quote soft qualities and actually sing know these are actually vitally important and that kinda brings us to a recent column you wrote for the New York Times New York Times opinion eight er called rich people just care last pretty provocatively titled and you started off by saying you you quote these lines that we use in social interactions the kind described arrogance are lacking empathy say turning a blind eye giving someone the cold shoulder looking down on people seen right through them and then you basically saying that these metaphors have kind of condescending dismisses behavior they're actually being shown in certain research settings to be very real Anna driver in this case I more so perhaps in the technology factor is people who perceive that they have the kind of upper hand in social power with the other person they're interacting with your vid the research comes outta here is a California at Berkeley s pretty disturbing what it shows is that in face-to-face interactions people who feel they have more social power whether it's money status whatever it may be have to be paid less attention to the other person then that person is paying them and embassy is based on paying attention so what this suggests to me he is the kind of them perhaps to know you know there's no there's a West understanding the other person's reality other experience and that means there's no room for compassionate action because you need at Embassy in order to go the next step and you know I see this I think we've all experienced it I in in one part of our lives or another I think number this is going on in washington to tell you the truth yeah I mean would you say because because I think what's interesting that's going on in Washington right now im kinda our modern politics I dan is I think that E you know I think there's a radically strong disagreements and i certainly in this show is pretty kinda strong views about the right policies to approach in the right kinda I you know ways to tackle big issues but I think what is what seems at least the stink to me and I am a you know a younger guy I guess but it it seems like this kinda formalization in washington and certain strains the politics in saying on you know really greed is good or we don't care about or poor people should be punished or we should cut food stamps really you know just in this kind of punitive I and nasty way it seems more the kind where front yep it is called blaming the victim in psychology circles and it can only have been is you just don't understand or here about the poor or the you know the disadvantaged and if you don't care and if you're elected because you don't care think that that opens the way to a very pro first trend politics yanaev it'll certainly fastening to support the research that you cited was the they were getting I i think was a believes a researcher at UC berkeley in a researcher at a urbana-champaign champagne and I Illinois that they wanted the reasons they were saying that I rich people might have less empath empathy in a two-minute others in poor people have more is because a lot of the kinda factors have day-to-day life can be sorted outsourced with money you don't need to ever asked if you know if you're you're living on the edge a you need to have a good connection with your neighbors the one who's gonna look at you kid when they come home from school until you get home from work in other words or what the berkeley group fares is the its it may be because poor people need other people or that the pay more attention and care more whatever the reason the fact is they do and so they're more tender upward the war to have laterally they have stronger social networks rich people as you say can outsource you know you hire a nanny you hire help and so it becomes you know what kind of monetary relationship rather than a personal emotional one in that changes the game absolutely we're talking with Daniel Goleman author of the new book focus the hidden driver is excellence and I its ok to getting back to that you know obviously we're in a time %uh really a at least up since the nineteen twenties in fact really kinda unprecedented wealth inequity on and there's you know a big policy in economic debate about that but I think what you're kinda pointing to here is that there's an emotional arm and psychological parallel to this problem in its a kinda on virtuous circle that feeling each other so I you know I'm curious what water the kind of path to dealing with this very particular crisis and focus well there's a large body of research that shows that if you have gap between groups that the biggest healer about divide is having friends pretty quick growing up with friends from the other group and what that suggests to me is it it would be fantastic if for example schools that have a lot of wealthy kid high-status kids had them do I community projects are Brian kids into that school from you know we won scholarships on from its advantage in other words do whatever you can to encourage meaningful relationships across that divide I remember once when I was in graduate school I met a guy very wealthy guy from the Guinness family you know the Guinness brewery II know that families product well so you know the prospect exactly I have love their product there and see see you wanted his aspiration was too work on the assembly line at a Ford plant in UK and run for parliament as a labor representative you want to be first Union Rep going to Parliament labor is terrific because he is breaking down the barriers we just have to be more conscious about that do you think it also I mean in this is another because they think to me it also introduce the whole other way of framing these policy questions where we kind of have this you know the sort of three frames we talk about tax policies example so on the one side is you know I turned that I have it screw you that's the kind of modern Republican position then there's the kinda pragmatic argument that a few taxing you I have some wave leveling the playing field in that create some kind AmeriCredit opportunity and then you have the argument which i think is important as well vitally important which is that an argument fairness and ethics and social cohesion but it seems like with what you're pointing to also is that there this this profound inequity has just serious emotional and psychological consequences for everybody I mean obviously the people on the bottom lines were struggling but also people who are really disconnected from their kinda can you hang your life Iran you know the 6 I'm I'm suggesting is very long term I think in the short term we need policies that institutionalized carrying until we have actual carrying a and you know cuz it takes a while to promote that and until we get there we've got her insurer that people who are vulnerable in our society are protected absolutely do what do you think Tom shirka what do you kinda do you see a positive role for social media and all this in terms of kinda I expanding our social networks or do you think that it's just kind of like a digital representation of what we already are kinda doing in our day-to-day lives anyways in terms of who were around what works posted yeah I think social media a double-edged sword on the one hand have a series of from the point of view of you're right and no no probs perfect from the point of view of attention their huge multiplier support we can know about pay attention to you know Wikipedia Google these expand our universe and through your friends on Facebook or your so called friends on Facebook because you can know about you know people to date or jobs that are available or apartments going for rent quickly through this expanded network but the downside is that your so-called friends on Facebook aren't necessarily real friends and you don't want to have virtual relationship replace your actual connections because you know the times that were most connector face to face in person when we have for when we really feel close to someone and you just don't duplicate that you can't replace it on the web absolutely Anna and as for the final question i'd I guess circling back to the beginning you would recommend techniques like maybe mindfulness meditation and yoga are what it worth it and i also I know that you have some CDs that have sort of come out along with the book which people yeah i i the a.m. with my I did instructional audio to go along with the book because I felt it you know I'm describing and need but then what to do about it so I didn't want to leave people feeling helpless there the ideas are available from that were side I'll more than sound one word more than found on that okay there's one for adults discomforting there's one for kids because I I think the me is universal in its great if we can start with the kids but it's not to wait up for adults so I i strongly recommend anyone who 122 strengthen their ability to focus to empathize take care to cover more than sound absolutely that great well Daniel Goleman its really just a pleasure and an honor having you on and die II appreciate your time so much I recommend everybody looking to get the CDs and focus the hidden driver excellence and really I also look at this column are rich people I just care last in the times its fascinating I think it well 10 offers a lot a context for some things we're seeing today thanks so much mike has been a pleasure to be with you great take care
B1 中級 なぜ金持ちはあまり気にしないのか (ダニエル・ゴールマンと) (Why The Rich Care Less (with Daniel Goleman)) 350 11 VoiceTube に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語