Midlife and the Moral Pressure of Limited Time | Kieran Setiya episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 27, 2026 · 1H 2M

Midlife and the Moral Pressure of Limited Time | Kieran Setiya

from The Midlife Chrysalis · host Chip Conley

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 shorterHow goal chasing can quietly drain meaning from everyday lifeThe difference between living for outcomes and living through meaningful processesWhy regret and existential FOMO are signs of a rich value system, not personal failureHow attention, attachment, and acceptance create a more grounded way to liveThis 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 philosophy05:28 Philosophy and physics connection07:03 Why write about midlife10:15 What defines midlife12:46 Pressures, regret, and time poverty15:27 Telic and atelic activities20:03 Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation21:23 Flow and engagement22:37 Finding atelic activities25:24 Chronos and Kairos30:00 Anticipated regret as wisdom34:48 Choosing a personal philosophy37:38 Philosophers Kieran admires40:47 When midlife ends43:42 Philosophy and young people48:19 Philosopher as president51:03 Making philosophy practical53:26 A life philosophy bumper sticker57:37 Attachment and responsibility Learn more about MEA at ⁠https://www.meawisdom.com/ #kieransetiya #midlifephilosophy #telicvsatelic #midlifereckoning #existentialregret #meaningoverachievement #philosophyofmidlife #timeandmeaning #midlifereflection #existentialfomo #processovergoals #lifewithoutburnout #modernelderacademy #attentionandmeaning #livingwellmidlife

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 shorterHow goal chasing can quietly drain meaning from everyday lifeThe difference between living for outcomes and living through meaningful processesWhy regret and existential FOMO are signs of a rich value system, not personal failureHow attention, attachment, and acceptance create a more grounded way to liveThis 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 philosophy05:28 Philosophy and physics connection07:03 Why write about midlife10:15 What defines midlife12:46 Pressures, regret, and time poverty15:27 Telic and atelic activities20:03 Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation21:23 Flow and engagement22:37 Finding atelic activities25:24 Chronos and Kairos30:00 Anticipated regret as wisdom34:48 Choosing a personal philosophy37:38 Philosophers Kieran admires40:47 When midlife ends43:42 Philosophy and young people48:19 Philosopher as president51:03 Making philosophy practical53:26 A life philosophy bumper sticker57:37 Attachment and responsibility Learn more about MEA at ⁠https://www.meawisdom.com/ #kieransetiya #midlifephilosophy #telicvsatelic #midlifereckoning #existentialregret #meaningoverachievement #philosophyofmidlife #timeandmeaning #midlifereflection #existentialfomo #processovergoals #lifewithoutburnout #modernelderacademy #attentionandmeaning #livingwellmidlife

NOW PLAYING

Midlife and the Moral Pressure of Limited Time | Kieran Setiya

0:00 1:02:10

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The Midlife Chrysalis?

This episode is 1 hour and 2 minutes long.

When was this The Midlife Chrysalis episode published?

This episode was published on February 27, 2026.

What is this episode about?

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...

Can I download this The Midlife Chrysalis episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!