PositiveThe Washington PostHis book is partly an intellectual autobiography, with an affecting portrait of his collaboration with [his research partner] Tversky, and it’s enlivened with anecdotes drawn from his years in the Israeli army and advising the Israeli government ... a methodical march—a bit too much of a march—through what psychologists know about how the brain analyzes situations and retrieves information ... Persistent cognitive errors have profound philosophical and political implications, but Kahneman doesn’t spend much time on these ... these wider-view thoughts are left to a sketchy, 11-page concluding chapter.