CONCEPT
The Vagal Response (Nerve of Compassion)
The parasympathetic activation through the vagus nerve that distinguishes awe from other emotions — producing the paradoxical pattern of arousal and calm, alertness and openness, engagement and non-defensiveness.
The vagus nerve — the longest cranial nerve, extending from brainstem through neck, chest, heart, lungs, and abdomen — is the primary component of the parasympathetic nervous system and, in Keltner's formulation, the nerve of compassion. Vagal tone is associated with the capacity for social connection, empathy, and prosocial behavior. The awe response involves a distinctive vagal signature: simultaneous sympathetic activation (producing arousal) and parasympathetic activation through the vagus (producing calm). This paradoxical pattern — alertness without anxiety, engagement without defensiveness, openness without vulnerability — is the physiological signature of awe and the state that the AI transition either cultivates or prevents, depending on conditions.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The vagus is involved in what Stephen Porges calls the social engagement system. Vagal tone — measured as heart rate variability reflecting vagal activity — correlates with compassion, sensitivity to others' emotional states, and willingness to cooperate. People with higher vagal tone are not nicer in some vague sense; they are physiologically
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