John Stuart Mill's midlife crisis came at 20 when he realized that if he got what he desired he still wouldn't be happy. Art and poetry (and maybe love) saved the day for him. In this week's episode, philosopher Kieran Setiya of MIT talks about his book Midlife with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Setiya argues we can learn from Mill to help deal with the ennui to which so many midlifers succumb--along with regrets for roads not taken and wistfulness for what could have been. Setiya argues that a well-lived life needs fewer projects and more pursuits that don't have goals or endpoints. He explains why past mistakes can turn out to be good things and how lost chances can help us appreciate the richness of life.
Ben Cohen on the Hot Hand
John Kay and Mervyn King on Radical Uncertainty
Nassim Nicholas Taleb on the Pandemic
Glenn Loury on Race, Inequality, and America
Josh Williams on Online Gaming, Blockchain, and Forte
Robert Lerman on Apprenticeships
Vivian Lee on The Long Fix
Agnes Callard on Philosophy, Progress, and Wisdom
Diane Ravitch on Slaying Goliath
Rebecca Henderson on Reimagining Capitalism
Sarah Carr on Charter Schools, Educational Reform, and Hope Against Hope
Martin Gurri on the Revolt of the Public
Robert Pondiscio on How the Other Half Learns
Paul Romer on the COVID-19 Pandemic
Branko Milanovic on Capitalism, Alone
L.A. Paul on Vampires, Life Choices, and Transformation
Alan Lightman on Stardust, Meaning, Religion, and Science
Vinay Prasad on Cancer Drugs, Medical Ethics, and Malignant
Ed Leamer on Manufacturing, Effort, and Inequality
Arnold Kling on the Three Languages of Politics, Revisited
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