This interesting, careful and occasionally outrageous book explores the complex interaction and competition between the attitudes of affirmation and regret that are almost inevitable as we look back on our lives and celebrate of deplore the conditions and choices that have made us what we are - that underlie our successes and failures, and our personal attachments. R. Jay Wallace's aims are very broad and his conclusions radical, but he begins by examining closely several examples of the phenomenon, real and imaginary, that are already familiar from recent philosophical literature.
Thomas Nagel, London Review of Books