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Description

We don’t talk about death very clearly.

We whisper about it at funerals…
then scroll past confident voices explaining how to manage it.

This episode started with a conversation on a plane — about a Yale philosophy course taught by Shelly Kagan, and a deceptively simple question:

Why is death bad at all?

From there, we explore the idea that death isn’t frightening because it’s painful — but because it deprives us of future goods. And how modern culture quietly replaces that reality with a more comforting story: that more time automatically means more life.

Along the way, we examine what philosopher Bernard Williams warned about immortality, why “forever” isn’t just more time, and how the Extra-Time Illusion shapes the way we delay conversations, risks, forgiveness, and meaning.

This isn’t a lecture.
It’s not a belief statement.

It’s an invitation to think more carefully about how we spend the time we already assume we have.

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