Episodios

  • 日本社会は「やり直し」を本気で許していない
    Mar 1 2026

    This episode explores why Japanese society does not truly allow people to start over. While the ideal is a system where anyone can change careers at any age, the reality is different. Companies prioritize young graduates, organizations struggle with hierarchy when older beginners enter, and cultural values favor staying on one path. As a result, people become trapped in “octopus pots” — narrow career paths they cannot easily leave. The solution is not to rely on the system, but to prepare individually by diversifying skills and keeping options open. In a society that resists second chances, survival depends on mobility and strategic flexibility.

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    7 m
  • タコツボを転々とする生き方
    Feb 28 2026

    This episode explores the concept of the “octopus trap” as a metaphor for modern careers. In traditional systems, people were encouraged to specialize deeply within a single field, often staying in the same role or company for decades. While this provided stability, it also led to identity becoming tightly bound to one domain. As industries shift due to automation and structural change, these “traps” can disappear, leaving individuals vulnerable. The episode proposes an alternative approach: develop skills deeply, but avoid attachment. Move between domains when necessary, maintaining flexibility. Rather than rejecting specialization, it suggests treating each role as temporary, enabling resilience in a rapidly changing world.

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    8 m
  • 軽さはなぜ気持ち悪くなったのか ── 三段階で見る現代の違和感
    Feb 27 2026

    This episode examines why modern content often feels shallow or uncomfortable. It introduces a three-stage model: an earlier era where meaning was serious and tied to responsibility, a later period where lightness and meaninglessness were accepted honestly, and the present, where light content is forced to appear meaningful. The result is a mismatch—superficial ideas presented as if they carry depth. The episode argues that the problem is not “lightness” itself, but the need to disguise it with artificial meaning. Understanding this distinction helps listeners better interpret today’s media, messages, and self-expression in a society driven by constant pressure to appear significant.

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    9 m
  • なぜ人は「自分で選んでいる」と思い込むのか
    Feb 26 2026

    This episode explores a fundamental question: do we really choose freely, or are our choices shaped by society? From music and careers to life decisions, we believe we act on our own will. However, the available options are often pre-structured by media, culture, and social expectations. The sense of “free will” may function more as a psychological mechanism that enables action rather than a true expression of independence. The episode also examines how people rely on external standards throughout life, from youth to retirement. Ultimately, it argues that human choice exists in a gray zone—neither fully free nor fully controlled.

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    10 m
  • 過剰品質が日本人の働き方を悪くする
    Feb 25 2026

    This episode explores why many Japanese workers appear overworked, focusing on the concept of “overquality.” Using everyday examples like convenience stores and comparisons with Thailand, the talk shows how Japan’s high service standards have become the default expectation. What was once a bonus—exceeding expectations—has turned into a minimum requirement, leading to overwork and stress. The episode argues that this is not just a workplace issue but a social structure. Rather than lowering quality, Japan needs to rebalance it. Fair work should match fair pay, and anything beyond that should remain optional, not mandatory, to create a more sustainable society.

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    8 m
  • SNSのつながりはクソの役にも立たないというのは本当か
    Feb 24 2026

    This episode explores whether social media connections are truly useless. While likes, follows, and comments create the illusion of connection, they often function as temporary relief from deeper loneliness. The discussion reframes these shallow interactions as “waste” that can be transformed through a process of “fermentation.” Drawing on Nietzsche’s philosophy, traditional Japanese agricultural cycles, and modern art, the episode argues that meaning is not given but created. Social media itself has little inherent value, but individuals who can process, reinterpret, and turn these experiences into thought or creation can generate real worth. The question is not the platform, but what you do with it.

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    10 m
  • なぜ現代社会では階級闘争が起きないのか
    Feb 23 2026

    This episode explores why class struggle appears absent in modern society. While conflicts between groups with opposing interests still exist, they are no longer visible in traditional forms like strikes or mass movements. Instead, dissatisfaction is internalized as personal failure, and structural issues are reframed as individual responsibility. The complexity of modern power structures makes it difficult to identify a clear “enemy,” while social divisions prevent solidarity. At the same time, constant hope—through career success or self-improvement—keeps people invested in the system. Combined with the numbing effects of entertainment and information overload, these factors transform collective resistance into personal struggle within the existing structure.

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    11 m
  • なぜ「語りがうまい人」ほど中身を問われなくなるのか
    Feb 22 2026

    This episode explores a harsh reality: the better someone speaks, the less their content is questioned. In today’s information-saturated society, fluent speech often replaces substance. What audiences consume is not truth or depth, but the feeling of understanding—comfort, clarity, and emotional ease. Skilled speakers avoid concrete claims, rely on abstraction, and create arguments that are difficult to challenge. As a result, speech becomes performance, almost like music, rather than a vehicle for ideas. This shift reflects a broader structural change, where responsibility and meaning are diluted. In the age of endless information and AI-generated content, the value of substance continues to erode.

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    10 m