|
戻る
要旨集
前文
歓迎の言葉
プログラム
特別講演:ジェーン・グドール博士
ジェーン・グドール博士によるルーツ&シューツ
口頭発表要旨
(305KB)
ポスター発表要旨
1-39 (268KB)
40-73 (272KB)
PDFファイルを表示・印刷するためにはAdobe Acrobat Readerが必要です。
Acrobat Readerは無料でダウンロードできます。
SAGA ホームページ
(English/日本語)
|
|
特別講演:ジェーン・グドール博士
「野生チンパンジーの母子の絆」
主催:林原自然科学博物館、 SAGA(アフリカ・アジアの大型類人猿を支援する集い)
協賛:林原共済会、 ジェーン・グドール・インスティテュート・ジャパン
開催日時:2001年11月17日(土) 15:00-17:00
会場:岡山国際交流センター(岡山県岡山市、JR岡山駅西口)2階、国際会議場
〒700-0026 岡山市奉還町2-2-1
Jane Goodall, the world-renowned scientist, writer, primatologist
and conservationist, had a talk in SAGA4 on the 17th November, 2001,
about her deepest beliefs about spirituality and offer a message of
hope.
Goodall is the world's foremost authority on chimpanzees, having
closely observed their behavior for the past quarter century in the
jungles of the Gombe Game Reserve in Africa, living in the chimps'
environment and gaining their confidence.
Her observations and discoveries are internationally heralded.
Her research and writing have made, and are making, revolutionary
in-roads into scientific thinking regarding the evolution of humans.
Last month she became the recipient of the Gandhi-King Award.
It honors men and women whose life work embodies the principles and
practices of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King. Previous winners
of the award were Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations,
and Nelson Mandela, former president of South Africa. The award is
a joint initiative of the Millennium World Peace Summit of religious
and spiritual leaders and world movement for non-violence.
Goodall also received the J. Paul Getty Wildlife Conservation
Prize for "helping millions of people understand the importance
of wildlife conservation to life on this planet." She has received
many other awards (like Kyoto Prize in 1990) and international recognitions.
Goodall first went to Africa in 1957 to work with the famed
anthropologist Dr. Louis Leakey. Despite having no formal training,
Goodall was chosen by Leakey to do some pioneer work observing chimpanzees
in 1960. One of Goodall's most dramatic early discoveries was that
chimps made and used tools in order to obtain food. That finding challenged
the existing belief at the time that only humans made and used tools.
In 1977, she established the Jane Goodall Institute. Grounded
in her pioneering study of chimpanzee behavior, the Institute emphasizes
the power of the individual to make a difference for all living things.
The Institute's research, conservation and education programs have
created a worldwide network of individuals joined by their commitment
to improving life on earth. With Goodall's words and example as guiding
principles, the institute, based in Silver Spring, Maryland, inspires
hope for a brighter future.
Copyright (C) 2001 SAGA
saga@pri.kyoto-u.ac.jp
戻る |