Nick McRae
mcraenich.bsky.social
Nick McRae
@mcraenich.bsky.social
Software Developer based out of London, Canada. Studied Medical Science at Western University. Interested in history, religion, and the sciences.
It's a bit of a chicken / egg problem because I don't think many people are actually looking for older content. And those who are will look for ways to find it.
something I’ve been thinking about is that all our content retrieval systems are biased towards recency rather than quality which makes it extremely hard to discover old good books, movies, blog posts, etc
November 8, 2025 at 11:34 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
something I’ve been thinking about is that all our content retrieval systems are biased towards recency rather than quality which makes it extremely hard to discover old good books, movies, blog posts, etc
September 19, 2025 at 6:24 PM
Zuckerberg might be one of the world's richest people, but imagine having to spend the rest of your life being the face of this company.

#Meta #Facebook #Instagram #Zuckerberg
Meta projected 10% of 2024 revenue came from scams and banned goods, Reuters reports
The report shows that the company was hesitant to crack down harder on scams, due to the billions in revenue that they were generating for Meta....
sherwood.news
November 6, 2025 at 7:54 PM
"We have been posting about our lives for a long time. But now I notice something else, something more than a compulsion to capture and share moments. I see people turning into TV characters, their memories into episodes, themselves into entertainment. We have become the meaningless content.."
We Are The Slop
Your life is my background noise
www.afterbabel.com
October 2, 2025 at 5:19 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
It looks like future historians will say that in all the annals of American economic governance, the appointment of Scott Bessent as Treasury Secretary—alongside the elevation of E.J. Antoni to the Bureau of Labor Statistics—was a critical sea-change away from institutional independence and... /
September 12, 2025 at 7:37 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
The “problem” with vaccines? They so effective at preventing deaths that they create generations of people that question whether disease was a problem in the first place because they have never experienced the horrors of a world without vaccines.
September 4, 2025 at 7:44 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
We've probably all heard the statement that your brain isn't fully formed until you're 25. However much it "feels" true — it just isn't. Neuroscientist @Garwboy writes for @BBCNews Science Focus about where it comes from, and the reality, and what the consequences would be if it was really the […]
Original post on flipboard.social
flipboard.social
August 11, 2025 at 5:43 PM
I'm coining a new term: 'Contemporary Bias'

When people see a problem as unique to their era but it's either a solution to a worse problem from a previous era, or a problem that's existed throughout our entire history but they have no historical perspective.

#Sociology #Anthropology
August 2, 2025 at 12:32 PM
This is bad. But if Trump was the best we could do at this point I don't think pollution is the root of the problem.
Trump administration attempting to unmake virtually all climate US regulations.

Triumph for fossil fuels industry as millions facing sea level rise, extreme heat, floods, fires, crop failures, health problems, ecological disasters.

Will others follow? Planet/People sacrificed to profits.
Trump bids to scrap almost all pollution regulations – can anything stop this?
EPA tries to rescind ‘endangerment finding’ – part of ‘drill, baby, drill’ agenda that experts say poses grave threat
www.theguardian.com
August 1, 2025 at 9:03 AM
And athletes make tens of millions of dollars. This isn't sustainable.
94% of teachers have had to dip into their own pockets to buy school supplies. An estimated 1 in 6 have second jobs during the school year to make ends meet.

The average Wall Street employee got a record $244,700 bonus last year.

Something has gone terribly wrong.
July 28, 2025 at 12:16 AM
The below resonates, having purpose is way underrated:

"And ultimately, I think I’m less interested in my own happiness (whatever that means) than I am interested in doing work that feels worth doing."
Thoughts on Motivation and My 40-Year Career
I’ve never published an essay quite like this. I’ve written about my life before, reams of stuff actually, because that’s how I process what I think, but never for public consumption. I’ve been pus…
charity.wtf
July 15, 2025 at 12:06 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
".. close to two-thirds of global financial professionals expect that the greenback will lose its leading reserve-currency status in the next five to 15 years. The global selloff of American bonds last month suggests the U.S. administration’s chaotic actions may have accelerated this timeline."
America is sinking, and Canada cannot go down with the ship
Donald Trump is blaming other countries for his country’s large trade deficits when the U.S. should be looking at itself
www.theglobeandmail.com
July 8, 2025 at 1:38 PM
I'm curious who in the #Zen community has discovered T'ien-t'ai.

It predated Zen in Chinese Buddhism and one of its seminal works was translated in 2017 by Paul Swanson (The Mo-ho chih-kuan). Swanson's title is called Clear Serenity, Quiet Insight. Well worth checking out.

#Buddhism #Tientai
June 22, 2025 at 2:26 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Total number of children that US women aged 20-24 plan to have
2002: 2.4 children
2012: 2.3 children
2023: 1.5 children

www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
June 18, 2025 at 7:28 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Spoiler alert: multitasking is bad
What is scrolling doing to our brain? Emma Kennedy talks to world leading cognitive neuroscientist Dr. Earl K. Miller, the Picower Professor of Neuroscience at MIT, to find out what scrolling is doing to our brains. open.spotify.com/episode/46qo...
What is scrolling doing to our brains?
Why? with Emma Kennedy · Episode
open.spotify.com
June 11, 2025 at 11:44 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
I’ve invented a new social media trend. It’s called the leave the Sentinelese people alone challenge.

My story in @observeruk.bsky.social today about the growing threats to uncontacted tribes.
Uncontacted tribes are under threat from developers, extractors… and influencers
An isolated people that Marco Polo called ‘violent and cruel’ just want to be left alone
observer.co.uk
May 2, 2025 at 10:59 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
So, this paper is passion-project of mine, asking questions about #motivation, proactive social actors, & emotional/affective dispositions. It is a long time coming & is a key piece in the argument for an affective #sociology. Check it out, open access (thx UBC)

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.
journals.sagepub.com
April 4, 2025 at 1:41 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Highly recommend Sarah Wynn-Williams’ new book Careless People, which offers her inside look at the psychological incentives to actors who have built Facebook and steered its growth.

(1/5)

read.macmillan.com/fib/careless...
Careless People - Macmillan
CARELESS PEOPLE A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism by Sarah-Wynn Williams Preorder your copy today ON SALE NOW Amazon Barnes & Noble BAM! Target Indigo Bookshop An explosive insider ...
read.macmillan.com
March 19, 2025 at 7:21 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
To live to hear Jim Goldgeier say that "NATO is finished as an institution" ...
Important thread. NATO is finished as an institution. It depends on a sense of shared purpose and shared values and a belief in collective defense. No ally can believe in the US having that foreign policy orientation any longer. US now has a Russia first policy. What does Europe do? See below.
Some thoughts from Brussels. Europe is awoken and believes America is all but gone. As such huge efforts on defense funding from EU, Germany, and others. This is real. BUT...

Europe is still not reckoning yet with its major structural security problem: No one does European defense. 1/
March 5, 2025 at 4:07 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Here’s my contribution to the issue on Wilson’s legacy: the sociobiology debate may have led the human evolutionary behavioural sciences down a path which resulted in scientific critique of bad science being dismissed as ideological “censorship”, making it harder to counter misuse of the discipline
The Legacy of Wilson’s Sociobiology for the Human Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences, Fifty Years On
When Wilson’s 1975 book Sociobiology was published it ignited a media firestorm. His bombastic style and speculations on the role of biological explanations for human behavior attracted considerable a...
online.ucpress.edu
March 5, 2025 at 11:13 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Blimey. Asked about Trump, Merz says he’s in close contact with European leaders about becoming “independent” from US (and confesses “I never thought I’d say that on TV show”). Casts doubt on value of NATO summit in June.

This from a die-hard Atlanticist. Things are moving fast.
February 23, 2025 at 7:59 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
www.foreignaffairs.com/united-state... This is by far the best, clearest and most realistic analysis of what we're in for that I've seen.
The Path to American Authoritarianism
What comes after democratic breakdown.
www.foreignaffairs.com
February 12, 2025 at 12:19 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
“The Köln Concert was totally improvised, but not what we understand as ‘free improvisation’. It’s tonal and melodic. It has a structure, and it transcends the boundaries of music-marketing. Jarrett described his solo improvisations as ‘universal folk music’."
#jazz #improvisation #film #jarrett
‘The Köln Concert is the hit he wants to disown’: why Keith Jarrett shunned two new films about his unlikely masterpiece
His back hurt and his piano was substandard. But the musician’s improvised 1975 show entered jazz history. Now two films are celebrating that mesmerising night – and the sweary teen promoter who made ...
www.theguardian.com
February 10, 2025 at 1:29 PM
Reposted by Nick McRae
Can people actually participate in democracy in a complex, media-ted world?

This debate between Lippmann and Dewey is just as relevant today.
The world outside and the pictures in our heads
Walter Lippmann, John Dewey, and the fundamental question of political epistemology: Can anybody understand modern society?
www.conspicuouscognition.com
February 7, 2025 at 9:56 AM
Reposted by Nick McRae
We live in the ✨ world of tomorrow ✨
January 16, 2025 at 4:34 PM