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In this interlude, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey of crowscupboard.com examines the hidden choreography of empathy - the mirror mechanism that allows one human brain to echo another’s joy, sorrow, and intent.
First identified in the early 1990s by Giacomo Rizzolatti and Vittorio Gallese at the University of Parma, mirror neurons revealed a startling truth: our brains rehearse the actions and emotions we witness in others. To see is to enact; to feel is to participate.

Drawing upon research from Tania Singer at the Max Planck Institute on compassion fatigue, Marco Iacoboni at UCLA on social context and empathy, and Jean Decety at the University of Chicago on psychopathy and volitional empathy, Dr. Rey explores how imitation becomes the architecture of morality itself. Empathy, he suggests, is not a moral ornament - it is a neurological duet.

Listeners will journey from the original macaque experiments to contemporary insights in social neuroscience, learning how oxytocin, dopamine, and neural oscillations create the subtle harmonics of connection. The episode also addresses how virtual life and digital mediation fracture our natural resonance, and how ritual, music, and collective rhythm can restore it.

In the end, Neural Mirroring invites reflection on the deep biochemistry of belonging.

Meaning, it turns out, is not imagined - it is synchronized.

We do not think each other into being; we fire together into awareness.

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46 episodes