
Hosted by Sean McClure · EN
A book doesn't have to be the destination. Sometimes it's just the spark.
The Cognitive Drift is a podcast by Sean McClure; researcher, systems thinker, and someone who has spent years studying how ideas are actually extracted from serious reading. Each episode begins with a book but quickly leaves it behind, following a single insight wherever it drifts; through complexity science, AI, philosophy, biology, and the deep patterns underneath how the world works.
This isn't a book review show. It's what happens in the mind of a conviction-driven thinker after the book is closed.
Become a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/join
Premium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.
Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.
*episodes are not endorsements for the books I discuss. Any misinterpretations of the author's content are my own.

Life isn't always beautiful, but there are slivers of it that are. In this episode, the book Theo of Golden by Allen Levi sparks my conversation about what it means to choose beauty in a broken world. Not out of naivety. Not because the tragedy isn't real. But because the art of living is exactly that; an art. A choice you make every day.ReferenceTheo of Golden by Allen LeviSupport the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss the nature of intelligence through the lens of prediction, exploring Blaise Agüera y Arcas’ argument that intelligence is not a property of brains, but a function present across systems; from molecules to modern AI.Author bio: blaiseaguera.comSupport the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss the core dynamics of money and how it shapes the modern economy. Starting with the basic chain of money supply, goods, prices, and currency value, I explore how inflation emerges and why it affects creditors and debtors differently. I also compare the quantity theory of money with modern monetary theory to show two competing ways economists think about government spending, taxes, and inflation. Along the way, I highlight historical examples like counterfeiting during wartime, the John Law Mississippi bubble, the gold versus silver standards, and modern cases like Bitcoin and the 2008 financial crisis. Ultimately, I argue that money is best understood not just as a tool for buying things, but as an information network that allows millions of people to coordinate economic activity and innovation at scale.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss the core ideas from *The Libertarian Mind* by David Boaz, exploring how decentralized decision-making, incentives, and voluntary exchange shape social order. I also introduce a “third way” perspective, to help us step back and think of the "market vs top-down-control" debate more objectively, and structurally. This allows us to consider how societies can improve by strengthening feedback, learning, and adaptive complexity rather than forcing outcomes through centralized control.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss why C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity remains one of the strongest arguments for the objectivity of morality. Starting from everyday experiences like arguments, excuses, and guilt, I explain how moral reasoning behaves like a real structure that survives cultural, psychological, and evolutionary explanations. This is not a religious pitch, but a structural analysis of why morality refuses to disappear, and what that tells us about how humans reason about right and wrong.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode, I break down Apple and China: The Capture of the World’s Greatest Company by Patrick McGee and explore how minimalist products like the iPhone are made possible by displaced complexity upstream; specifically China’s ability to mobilize labor at extreme speed and scale.I look at how elegance, efficiency, and seamless design often hide massive human systems, political infrastructure, and ethical trade-offs that make those products possible in the first place. The real question isn’t whether Apple designs beautiful products; it’s who pays for the smoothness.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss Mustafa Suleyman’s book The Coming Wave, and explore why rapid diffusion, opaque decision-making, and runaway technological acceleration pose serious risks to public trust and global stability. I break down the core dynamics of containment, including Goodhart’s law, gatekeeping, fat-tailed risks, feedback lag, irreversibility, and the alignment tax. I then relate these dynamics to Suleyman’s proposed ten-point plan for navigating this "narrow path" of AI containment.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode I discuss Ben Shapiro’s Lions and Scavengers, exploring how morality, free markets, and ideology intertwine. I break down false consciousness, the moral roots of capitalism, and how losing moral anchors like family and faith leads to social decay. I argue that both left and right rely on narrow definitions of merit and morality—and that only a universal, meta-level moral framework can restore balance to society and the economy.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode, I discuss Chris Miller’s book Chip War, and use it to argue that the real lesson of the semiconductor race isn’t just about who controls the technology, but who possesses the tacit knowledge—the deeply embedded, experience-based know-how—that makes technology work, and why that makes global dependency far harder to escape than it seems.Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.

In this episode, I recall Seeking Wisdom by Peter Bevelin. But, rather than my usual chapter-by-chapter recall, I give my opinion on the book in general, referencing parts of the book throughout. Please let me know which approach you prefer. Support the showBecome a Member at thebookrecall.com or patreon.com/8431143/joinPremium members get access to the full member app. This includes data visualizations of the core concepts in each episode, a Study Space for learning fundamentals, and premium articles on Techniques and Mindsets.Members can also save personal notes, explore episode summaries and transcripts, search across episodes, track watch history and progress, and participate in the community forum. Premium membership includes ongoing support.