『Something Interesting』のカバーアート

Something Interesting

Something Interesting

著者: Steve McCullough
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Something Interesting is an audio essay anthology about how strange and complicated it is to be a person in the world. It explores the philosophical, the political, and the personal.

Steve, your host, has an eclectic background. He headed to university to study applied physics but wound up doing a PhD on Holocaust memoirs. He also worked for years as a web developer, and has more recently been a digital writer and producer working in climate change, human rights, and public history.

  • The theme music is "Dirt Rhodes" by Kevin MacLeod.

  • The cover art is based on "Concentric squares forming a geometric maze pattern" by Cansu Sarp.

Please direct all correspondence to thesomethinginterestingpod@gmail.com.

Steve McCullough 2026
社会科学
エピソード
  • Birds
    2026/06/28

    Birds have been a source of fascination for thousands of years. And people have long looked to birds to explain humans. For Aristotle, birds were one of the nonhuman species closest to us. The similarities are noted, however, en route to arguing that human beings are distinct, unique, and elevated over the rest of nature.

    People constantly cherry-pick examples from nature to defend our behaviour or social arrangements as “natural,” and birds play a major role in this work of political and cultural self-justification.

    In this episode I reflect on my own relationship with my local birds in the context of this centuries-old double logic, why we find birds both uncanny and appealing, and what it means to live in community with nonhuman animals.

    Transcript

    Reading

    Tim Burkhead. Birds and Us: A 12,000-Year History from Cave Art to Conservation.

    William Cronon, ed. Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature.

    Chris Elphing, John B. Dunning, and David Allan Sibley, eds. The Sibley Guide to Bird Life and Behaviour.

    Bernd Heinrich. The Gifts of the Crow, The Homing Instinct, Mind of the Raven, The Nesting Season, Ravens in Winter.

    Bart Kempenaers. “Mating systems in birds.” Current Biology, Volume 32, Issue 20, 2022, Pages R1115-R1121,ISSN 0960-9822, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.06.066.

    Joan E. Strassmann. Slow Birding: The Art and Science of Enjoying the Birds in Your Own Backyard.

    Credits

    Written, recorded, and produced by Steve McCullough.

    The music is “Dirt Rhodes" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons - By Attribution 4.0.

    The cover art features “Concentric squares forming a geometric maze pattern” by Cansu Sarp.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分
  • Uncertainty
    2026/06/14

    Being a person means constantly navigating deep and genuine uncertainty. We are uncertain about what we think, how we feel, what might happen, and what we should do.

    Being uncertain means confronting the limits of our knowledge or our foresight in our lifelong efforts to persist and thrive, to seek safety and security, to find companionship and community, so make some sense of the world.

    We live in a digital media and social environment that tries to take advantage of that, that monetizes and exploits our desire for security and certainty. Some of the same cognitive biases and shortcuts that mean we can't ever be fully certain and secure when making our way through this very complex existence also make us susceptible to charismatic misinformation.

    Transcript

    Credits

    Written, recorded, and produced by Steve McCullough.

    The music is “Dirt Rhodes" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons - By Attribution 4.0.

    The cover art features “Concentric squares forming a geometric maze pattern” by Cansu Sarp.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分
  • Guns
    2026/05/31

    Cuturally, we are both fascinated and repelled by guns. They play a huge role in our love of action films and our fears of criminal violence. There are deep divisions in knowledge and communication between the communities of people who do and do not own guns. The reality of guns is obscured and shaped by the stories we tell about them.

    In my early 40s, I took up hunting and became a gun owner. Crossing that divide taught me a lot about why we have such a hard time talking and thinking about guns.

    Transcript

    Credits

    The music is “Dirt Rhodes" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), licensed under Creative Commons - By Attribution 4.0.

    The cover art features “Concentric squares forming a geometric maze pattern” by Cansu Sarp.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    22 分
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