Midlife can feel unsettling even when life looks successful on paper. This episode explores why that discomfort appears and how it can become a source of clarity rather than crisis.
Our guest is Kieran Setiya, MIT philosophy professor and author of Midlife: A Philosophical Guide. Drawing from philosophy and lived experience, he offers a calm, deeply human way of understanding regret, time, ambition, and meaning in the middle years of life.
In this conversation, you will learn:
- Why midlife is shaped by the past we cannot undo and a future that feels shorter
- How goal chasing can quietly drain meaning from everyday life
- The difference between living for outcomes and living through meaningful processes
- Why regret and existential FOMO are signs of a rich value system, not personal failure
- How attention, attachment, and acceptance create a more grounded way to live
This episode is thoughtful, reassuring, and deeply practical for anyone questioning direction, purpose, or satisfaction in midlife.
Listen now and discover a wiser, steadier way to meet the second half of life.
Timestamps:
02:59 Early interest in philosophy
05:28 Philosophy and physics connection
07:03 Why write about midlife
10:15 What defines midlife
12:46 Pressures, regret, and time poverty
15:27 Telic and atelic activities
20:03 Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation
21:23 Flow and engagement
22:37 Finding atelic activities
25:24 Chronos and Kairos
30:00 Anticipated regret as wisdom
34:48 Choosing a personal philosophy
37:38 Philosophers Kieran admires
40:47 When midlife ends
43:42 Philosophy and young people
48:19 Philosopher as president
51:03 Making philosophy practical
53:26 A life philosophy bumper sticker
57:37 Attachment and responsibility
Learn more about MEA at https://www.meawisdom.com/
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