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The Synapse and the Stoa: Psychology & Stoic Philosophy

Podcast von John Sampson | Science-Based Self-Help

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

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Mehr The Synapse and the Stoa: Psychology & Stoic Philosophy

Explore the intersection of modern psychology and ancient Stoic philosophy with The Synapse and the Stoa, a science-based self-help podcast hosted by John Sampson. Each episode bridges the gap between neuroscience and timeless wisdom to provide practical tools for mental resilience and personal growth.In a world of surface-level advice, we go deeper. By examining the neural pathways of the 'Synapse' and the timeless logic of the 'Stoa', we unpack why we think, feel, and act the way we do. Whether you're struggling with burnout, seeking better habits, or simply curious about the human condition, this show provides a roadmap for the modern seeker.New episodes drop every Tuesday at 5:00 AM - perfect for your morning commute or early gym session.Watch the video version of these episodes on YouTube: The Synapse and the Stoa | John Sampson - YouTubeCheck out our detailed show notes at www.synapseandstoa.comIf you find value in these episodes, please leave a 5-star review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. It helps a solo show like this reach more people.

Alle Folgen

32 Folgen

Episode The Ancient Engine Running Your Life: Emotions, Self-Control, and the Science of Better Decisions Cover

The Ancient Engine Running Your Life: Emotions, Self-Control, and the Science of Better Decisions

Your emotions aren't the problem. The gap between feeling and choosing is. In this episode of The Synapse and the Stoa, John Sampson breaks down the science, philosophy, and practical toolkit of emotional regulation — the real skill behind what we mistakenly call being 'too emotional.' Drawing on Aristotle, the Stoics, and cutting-edge neuroscience, this episode makes the case that emotions are one of evolution's greatest gifts — and explains why most people still let them run the show. What's covered: • Why emotions evolved and why neuroscience proves they are essential — not obstacles — to good decision-making • Antonio Damasio's somatic marker hypothesis: the brain research that changed everything we know about emotion and rational thought • The amygdala hijack: why your threat response fires 12 milliseconds before your rational mind and what that costs you • Aristotle on akrasia — acting against your own better judgment — and why he called anger easy and calibrated anger rare • The Stoic distinction between propatheiai (first movements you can't control) and passions (the judgments you can) • Roy Baumeister's ego depletion research — why self-control is a finite daily resource and how to protect it • Five practical tools — including the 90-second rule, the Stoic pause, pre-commitment strategies, and daily regulation habits — that you can start using immediately The core insight: There's no such thing as being too emotional. The question is whether you have effective control over what you do with what you feel. If the answer is no — this episode is your starting point. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Philosophers referenced: Aristotle, Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius Researchers referenced: Antonio Damasio, Daniel Goleman, Roy Baumeister, George Loewenstein, Paul Slovic ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ The Synapse and the Stoa bridges ancient philosophy, modern psychology, and neuroscience to deliver practical guidance for real-world challenges. Hosted by John Sampson. New episodes weekly. If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs it — and leave a rating wherever you listen. It makes a real difference.

Gestern - 29 min
Episode The Weight Room of Life: How Little Irritations Build Big Character Cover

The Weight Room of Life: How Little Irritations Build Big Character

Something irritated you today. And you probably moved on — or didn't. In this episode, John Sampson examines the minor annoyances, petty frustrations, and small daily friction that constitute most of human experience — and makes the case that these moments aren't obstacles to a good life. They're the training ground for one. Drawing on affective neuroscience, Stoic philosophy, and modern psychology, this episode explains why your brain is wired to overreact to small things, why daily hassles damage your health more than major life events, and how the practices of Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius map with striking precision onto what modern brain science has since confirmed. What you'll take away from this episode: • Why the amygdala hijack happens before your rational brain even gets involved — and the neurological gap where your freedom actually lives • How the "stress bucket" of daily microstress builds toward burnout, emotional overflow, and displaced anger • The Stoic doctrine of indifferents — and why classifying minor irritations correctly changes how much power they have over you • Premeditatio malorum: the morning practice Marcus Aurelius used to neutralize daily friction before it could ambush him • The dichotomy of control, and why Epictetus — a man who owned nothing — understood freedom better than most • The kindling hypothesis: why some people become more reactive over time, not less — and how to reverse it • 7 practical tools for managing irritation in real time: the two-second pause, the morning brief, the temporal audit, the price of tranquility reframe, affect labeling, the three-strike system, and daily mindfulness training This episode is for anyone who wants to stop surviving the small stuff — and start using it. —— The Synapse and the Stoa is hosted by John Sampson. New episodes explore practical solutions to life's real challenges through the combined lens of ancient philosophy, modern psychology, and neuroscience.

26. Mai 2026 - 34 min
Episode Why Imposing Your Standards on Others Always Backfires — Stoicism, Neuroscience & Psychology Cover

Why Imposing Your Standards on Others Always Backfires — Stoicism, Neuroscience & Psychology

Have you ever pushed someone to change — and watched them dig in harder? Or held someone to a standard they never agreed to, and wondered why the relationship suffered for it? In this episode, John Sampson traces one of the most universal human dynamics: how we build our personal standards, why we instinctively try to impose them on the people around us, and why — every time — it produces the opposite of what we want. Drawing on Stoic philosophy, modern neuroscience, and clinical psychology, John breaks down the brain science behind why your standards feel like universal truth (they're not), what psychological reactance is and why pressure always backfires, what Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and John Stuart Mill all understood about the limits of imposition, and how to actually influence the people you care about without controlling them. The episode closes with seven practical steps you can start using today — tools for living your standards at the highest level without making other people's choices your burden. If you've ever struggled with a partner, a kid, a friend, or a colleague who just won't listen — this one is for you.

19. Mai 2026 - 30 min
Episode The Archer's Mark: Why a Life Vision Is the Foundation of Every Good Decision Cover

The Archer's Mark: Why a Life Vision Is the Foundation of Every Good Decision

What separates the men who build meaningful lives from the ones who drift? It's not talent. It's not luck. It's a target. In this episode of The Synapse and the Stoa, host John Sampson breaks down one of the most powerful and underrated concepts in human history — the life vision — through the lens of ancient philosophy, modern neuroscience, and psychology. Whether you're 22 and lost, or 42 and wondering how you got here, this episode is built for you. You'll learn what Aristotle meant when he said that like archers who have a mark to aim at, we are more likely to hit upon what is right — and why that metaphor is just as sharp today as it was 2,400 years ago. You'll understand what the Stoics — Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, Seneca — actually taught about building a life with purpose, and why their framework holds up against the latest brain science. And you'll walk away with real, actionable tools you can use this week. In this episode: * Why a lack of vision is the root cause of procrastination, poor decisions, and quiet misery * What Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics taught about living with intention * The Stoic distinction between telos and skopos — and why it changes how you handle failure * The neuroscience of the prefrontal cortex, dopamine, and your Default Mode Network — and how a vision literally rewires your brain * The psychology of Future Self-Continuity — why you treat your future self like a stranger, and how to fix it * What to do if you don't yet have a vision * Six practical, science-backed tools to build and live your vision — including the Best Possible Self exercise, WOOP, and the Daily Stoic Check-In * The Stoic practices of Premeditatio Malorum, Amor Fati, Memento Mori, and the View from Above — explained practically, not academically This is not a motivational pep talk. This is philosophy, neuroscience, and psychology working together to give you a framework for a better life. The Synapse and the Stoa is the podcast that finds practical solutions to life's real challenges through the intersection of ancient wisdom and modern science. New episodes every week. 🎧 Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts. "Not life, but a good life, is to be chiefly valued." — Socrates

12. Mai 2026 - 35 min
Episode Empathy Is Not Weakness | Philosophy, Neuroscience & How to Use It Cover

Empathy Is Not Weakness | Philosophy, Neuroscience & How to Use It

Most people think empathy is a soft skill — something you either have or you don't, and something that makes you less effective, not more. That's wrong. And this episode proves it. In this episode of The Synapse and the Stoa, host John Sampson builds the case that empathy is one of the most powerful cognitive tools available to you — drawing on ancient philosophy, modern neuroscience, and hard clinical data. You'll learn: * What empathy actually is (and what it isn't) * Why Aristotle and the Stoics all treated it as a tool, not a feeling * What mirror neurons and the anterior insula reveal about how empathy works in your brain * Why understanding others and understanding yourself are the same skill * How the FBI uses empathy to resolve hostage crises * The clinical data showing empathic physicians get measurably better patient outcomes * 6 practical steps you can start using today Empathy isn't about agreeing with people. It's about getting accurate data on the world around you — and on yourself. Without it, you can't solve the hard problems. REFERENCES: * Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics (phronesis, friendship, eleos) * Marcus Aurelius, Meditations * Seneca, De Ira (On Anger) * Epictetus, Discourses * Hierocles — concentric circles / oikeiosis * Tania Singer — ReSource Project (empathy vs. compassion neural differentiation) Mohammadreza Hojat — Jefferson Scale of Empathy / clinical outcomes study * Center for Creative Leadership — empathy and leadership performance * Chris Voss — Tactical Empathy (Never Split the Difference) * Rittel & Webber — Wicked Problems framework The Synapse and the Stoa explores practical solutions to life's challenges through ancient philosophy, modern psychology, and neuroscience. New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe so you don't miss one.

5. Mai 2026 - 33 min
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Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
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