The Observable Unknown
In this interlude of The Observable Unknown, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey examines one of the most underestimated forces shaping modern human behavior: regulation. Human beings regulate one another constantly. Long before conscious reasoning, ideology, or deliberate communication, the nervous system is already scanning the environment for cues of safety and danger. Emotional states spread socially. Calm spreads. Fear spreads. Suspicion spreads. Chaos spreads. The body absorbs far more from its environment than most people consciously recognize. This episode explores the transmissible nature of nervous system states. Drawing on the work of neuroscientist Stephen Porges and the development of Polyvagal Theory through the Polyvagal Institute, the discussion examines how the autonomic nervous system continuously performs subconscious threat detection through a process Porges termed neuroception. Tone of voice, facial expression, posture, pacing, and emotional tension all become physiological signals interpreted by the body before conscious thought fully forms. The episode then turns toward the work of psychologist Lisa Feldman Barrett at Northeastern University and her research into emotional construction, predictive processing, and social emotional regulation. Barrett’s work challenges simplistic views of emotion as fixed biological events, revealing instead that emotional states are constructed through memory, physiology, context, prediction, and collective reinforcement. From this framework, the episode examines emotional contagion across families, workplaces, institutions, digital culture, and civilization itself. Chronic anxiety becomes normalized within systems. Dysregulation spreads socially until exhaustion begins masquerading as ordinary life. Under prolonged stress, nervous systems lose proportionality. Ambiguity begins to feel threatening. Silence feels hostile. Delay feels rejecting. Interpretation destabilizes under pressure. Drawing from themes connected to Temporal Architecture™ and The Twelve Decision Bodies™, Dr. Rey explores how different constitutional structures destabilize under accumulated dysregulation. Some become hypervigilant. Others overwork compulsively. Others detach into abstraction or absorb the emotional instability of everyone around them until personal identity itself begins dissolving into environmental pressure. The episode also examines the historical role of ritual systems in nervous system stabilization. Prayer cycles, chanting, fasting, silence, meditation, ceremony, seasonal observance, and disciplined repetition historically functioned not merely as symbolic behaviors but as physiological regulation structures designed to stabilize perception and preserve social coherence. This isn't merely an episode about psychology. It’s an episode about collective nervous systems. About how emotional climates spread across families, cultures, and institutions. And about the moral weight carried by regulated presence in an age increasingly organized around chronic stimulation and emotional escalation. This episode offers a psychologically grounded and philosophically rigorous exploration of trauma, nervous system regulation, emotional contagion, Polyvagal Theory, predictive processing, social psychology, stress physiology, cultural exhaustion, and the hidden relationship between stability and perception. The nervous system is always listening. And every room remembers the states repeatedly carried into it. The Observable Unknown is a podcast exploring consciousness at the intersection of neuroscience, culture, and lived experience. It is written and hosted by Dr. Juan Carlos Rey of drjuancarlosrey.com and crowscupboard.com, an interdisciplinary scholar whose work bridges neuroscience, philosophy, and the interior dimensions of human experience. https://squareup.com/outreach/nyD7vi/subscribe
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