Masahiro Morioka
Masahiro Morioka is a Japanese philosopher, who has contributed to the fields of philosophy of life, bioethics, gender studies, media theory, and civilization studies. He is a professor of philosophy and ethics at Waseda University, Japan. He coined the term "life studies" for an integrated approach to the issues of life, death, and nature in contemporary society. Since 2006 he has proposed a new philosophical discipline he calls "philosophy of life". He has published numerous academic books and articles, mainly in Japanese, and has regularly contributed commentaries and book reviews to major Japanese newspapers and magazines. His books include Painless Civilization, which criticizes the incessant attempts to escape from pain and suffering in modern civilization, Confessions of a Frigid Man: A Philosopher's Journey into the Hidden Layers of Men's Sexuality, which illuminates some of the darker sides of male sexuality such as the "Lolita complex" and male frigidity, and Lessons in Love for Herbivore Boys, one of the books that helped popularize the term "herbivore men". He is the editor-in-chief of Journal of Philosophy of Life and an associate editor of Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics.
Biography
Morioka was born in Kōchi Prefecture, Japan, in 1958 and entered The University of Tokyo in 1977. In the beginning he studied physics and mathematics but he later turned to philosophy and ethics. In graduate school he specialized in bioethics and environmental ethics, a newly emerging field at that time as well as Wittgenstein’s later philosophy. He published two books on bioethics, An Invitation to the Study of Life and Brain Dead Person, and moved to the International Research Center for Japanese Studies, Kyoto, in 1988. There he wrote several books including How to Live in a Post-religious Age and Consciousness Communication; the former is a philosophical and psychological analysis of Aum Shinrikyo’s sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway that occurred in 1995 and the latter discusses subconscious interactions in the age of computer communications. He spent one year as a visiting scholar at Wesleyan University, Connecticut, USA, in 1991.In 1997, he moved to Osaka Prefecture University where he taught philosophy and ethics. In 2001 he published Life Studies Approaches to Bioethics, in which he discussed brain death and organ transplantation, feminist bioethics and abortion, the disability rights movement, and new forms of eugenics from the perspective of “life studies.” In this book he introduces concepts such as "the fundamental sense of security" and "the reality of a deeply shaken self", which he discovered through an examination of Japanese bioethics literature written in the 1970s. He published Painless Civilization, mentioned above, in 2003. This is considered by many his most important and influential book to date. His books on men’s studies, also mentioned above, have been frequently referred to in the field of gender studies. He published The Cartoon Introduction to Philosophy in 2013. He played an important role in the revision of the organ transplantation law in Japan in the years 2000-2009. He asserted that organs should not be harvested from small children who have been declared brain dead but his proposal was ultimately rejected by the Diet.
He moved to the School of Human Sciences, Waseda University, in 2015.
Key concepts
Brain death as a human relationship
Morioka defines brain death not as a material process occurring inside the brain but as a human relationship formed between a comatose patient and his/her family members or others who surround him/her. He calls this a "human relationship oriented analysis" approach to bioethics. He claims that brain death is not necessarily human death.Consciousness communication
In his 1993 book Consciousness Communication he distinguished "consciousness communication", communication for the purpose of social interaction itself, from "information communication", communication used as a tool for conveying information. He predicted that consciousness communication would play a central role in the coming information society, and put forward the concepts of "community of anonymity" and "dream navigator".Life studies
Morioka calls his comprehensive approach to the issues of life, death, and nature "life studies". The ultimate goal of life studies is to help people to live their lives without regret. Morioka asserts that the most important aspect of life studies is never to detach ourselves from the problems we are tackling and never to think of ourselves as exceptions; He encourages us to keep our eyes on our own desires and the evil that he believes is deeply engraved in our hearts.Fundamental sense of security
The fundamental sense of security is one of the central concepts in Morioka’s philosophy. In the book Life Studies Approaches to Bioethics he describes this as "a sense of security that allows me to strongly believe that even if I had been unintelligent, ugly, or disabled, my existence in the world itself would have been equally welcomed, and whether I succeed or fail, and even if I become a doddering old man, my existence will continue to be welcomed". He asserts that this is a precondition of our being able to live our lives without regret.Painless civilization
Morioka asserts that our contemporary civilization is developing in the form of a "painless civilization". He asserts that this civilization's limitless penchant for eliminating pain and suffering makes us completely lose sight of the meaning of life that is indispensable to human beings and deprives us of the joy of life in exchange for pleasure, pleasantness, and comfort. He further claims that people in advanced countries know that they are drowning in the tide of their painless civilization but do not know how to escape from it.The desire of the body and the desire of life
Morioka distinguishes between two kinds of desires: the desire of the body and the desire of life. The former is the desire to expand the amount of one's pleasure, property, and stability, and the latter is the desire to dismantle the former, throw away pleasure, property, and stability, and change into a being in a different state of mind and body.Frigid man
Morioka uses the phrase "frigid man" to describe a man who suffers from sexual frigidity caused by "male frigidity" and has a attraction toward young girls, especially girls wearing school uniforms. Many Japanese adult males suffer from this condition and love to see the images of young girls in the mass media and on the Internet. This is the pathology hidden behind the Japanese male's "Lolita complex".Herbivore men
In Morioka's writings, "herbivore men" are timid young Japanese men who are inexperienced and unassertive in love and sex. Just after the publication of Morioka's book, Lessons in Love for Herbivore Boys, 2008, the term "herbivore men" became a buzz word in Japan and was reported worldwide.Philosophy of life
The philosophy of life is a new discipline in contemporary philosophy that aims to examine the topics of life, death, and nature from various philosophical angles. It widens the scope of the 19th century's Lebensphilosophie and encompasses contemporary bioethics, environmental philosophy, philosophy of biology, biopolitics, the study of the meaning of human life, and other areas of research.Birth affirmation
This is one of the key concepts in Morioka's philosophy of life. Birth affirmation means to be able to say yes, from the bottom of our hearts, to the fact that we have been born. Morioka distinguishes "birth affirmation" from similar concepts such as "survival affirmation" and "affirmation of one's whole life". He considers "birth denial" as the worst form of human evil.Dignity of human life
He criticized and enlarged Kant's idea of dignity and proposed three kinds of dignity in human life, namely, "dignity of one's life," dignity of a one-off life of a human being, "dignity of the body," dignity of having the body, and "dignity of connected life," dignity of being connected to other human beings and non-human creatures.Publications
Book (English)
- 2017 Confessions of a Frigid Man: A Philosopher's Journey into the Hidden Layers of Men's Sexuality Open Access Book
Book (English, Edited by Morioka)
- 2015 Masahiro Morioka Reconsidering Meaning in Life: A Philosophical Dialogue with Thaddeus Metz Open Access Book
- 2017 Masahiro Morioka Nihilism and the Meaning of Life: A Philosophical Dialogue with James Tartaglia Open Access Book
Books (Japanese, incomplete)
- 1988 An Invitation to the Study of Life
- 1989 Brain-Dead Person: Human Relationship-Oriented Analysis of Brain Death
- 1993 Consciousness Communication
- 1994 Reconsidering the View of Life
- 1996 How to Live in a Post-Religious Age
- 1997 An Intellectual Method of Facing Oneself
- 2001 Life Studies Approaches to Bioethics: A New Perspective on Brain Death, Feminism, and Disability
- 2001 Life Torn Apart
- 2003 Painless Civilization: A Philosophical Critique of Desire
- 2005 Confessions of a Frigid Man: A Philosopher's Journey into the Hidden Layers of Men's Sexuality
- 2005 Life Studies for Beginners: A Philosophy for Facing Oneself
- 2008 Lessons in Love for Herbivore Boys
- 2009 Herbivore Boys will Bring Your Last Love
- 2009 The 33rd Stone: A Philosophy for a Wounded Age
- 2012 Connecting the Living and the Deceased: A Philosophy for Requiescat and Rebirth
- 2013 The Cartoon Introduction to Philosophy
- 2015 Philosophy, Trauma, Sexuality: Book Reviews 1986-2001
- 2015 A Philosophical Inquiry into Personhood, Dignity, and Brain Death
Selected English papers
- 1991 The Concept of Life in Contemporary Japan.
- 2001 Reconsidering Brain Death: A Lesson from Japan's Fifteen Years of Experience.
- 2001 A Proposal for Revision of the Organ Transplantation Law Based on A Child Donor’s Prior Declaration.
- 2005 Painless Civilization and Fundamental Sense of Security: A Philosophical Challenge in the Age of Human Biotechnology.
- 2006 The Ethics of Human Cloning and the Sprout of Human Life.
- 2011 Natural Right to Grow and Die in the Form of Wholeness: A Philosophical Interpretation of the Ontological Status of Brain-dead Children.
- 2011 Narrative Responsibility and Moral Dilemma.
- 2012 Human Dignity and the Manipulation of the Sense of Happiness: From the Viewpoint of Bioethics and Philosophy of Life.
- 2013 A Phenomenological Study of “Herbivore Men.”
- 2013 How a Japanese Philosopher Encountered Bioethics.
- 2013 Why is It Hard for Us to Accept Moral Bioenhancement?: Comment on Savulescu’s Argument.
- 2015 Feminism, Disability, and Brain Death: Alternative Voices from Japanese Bioethics.
- 2015 Is Meaning in Life Comparable?: From the Viewpoint of ‘The Heart of Meaning in Life’.
- 2015 Manga and Philosophy: Why Was the Book “Manga Introduction to Philosophy” Written?.
- 2017 Philosophy of Life in Contemporary Society.
- 2017 The Trolley Problem and the Dropping of Atomic Bombs.