Book Reviews : The Projected Arab Court of Justice. By EZZELDIN FODA. (The Hague: Mar tinus Nijhoff. 1957. Pp. xiv, 252. Guilders 19.-.)

AuthorFoster H. Sherwood
Date01 September 1958
DOI10.1177/106591295801100333
Published date01 September 1958
Subject MatterArticles
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Perhaps Eggleston understated the strength of the bonds that hold member-
nations together. They are not only historical, but also economic, cultural,
and political; loose as the association is, its usefulness persists and it may
iong enaure.
DEAN E. McHENRY.
University of California, Los Angeles.
The Anatomy of Freedom. By HENRY PRATT FAIRCHILD, with an introduc-
tion by CORLISS LAMONT. (New York: Philosophical Library. 1957. Pp.
xiii, 103. $3.50.)
This book is the last published work of the longtime professor of soci-
ology at New York University. Just why it was published is not clear. No
doubt one reason why a publisher decides to convert a manuscript intro print
is a belief that an author has something new and different to say about a
subject. Evidently there are other reasons for publishing books.
In the introduction this little posthumous volume is described as a
&dquo;small encyclopedia&dquo; on the subject of &dquo;the many types of freedom.&dquo; In
the preface the author declares that the purpose of the book is &dquo;to examine
the belief in freedom, to see how much of it is illusion, and to seek the
possibilities of achieving the maximum realization....&dquo; Actually, the book
is mainly an undertaking in the definition of terms. It reads like a collection
of marginal notations about verbal trivia. The terms belabored are drawn
from the familiar jargon of nineteenth-century British Liberalism. The refer-
ences are to Locke, Spencer, Sumner, and of course the master himself,
John Stuart Mill. According to the author nothing really significant has
been said about the subject of freedom since the Essay on Liberty was pub-
lished a century ago. Mill may have gotten into the wrong pew a few times,
but certainly he was chanting his prayers at the right church.
If this book has a message, it is summed up in the last dangling sentence:
&dquo;The maximum sense of freedom will be attained ... when the principle of
co-aperation has supplanted the principle of...

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