Book Reviews : Time Runs Out in CBI. By CHARLES F. ROMANUS AND RILEY SUNDERLAND. (Washington, D.C.: Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of Military History, 1959, Pp. xvii, 428.)

AuthorTang Tsou
Published date01 September 1961
DOI10.1177/106591296101400319
Date01 September 1961
Subject MatterArticles
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The successive parts of the bibliography deal with introductory material,
general information, &dquo;fundamentals and backgrounds,&dquo; a guide by subjects,
and a guide by countries. The subject-matter breakdown is quite detailed, and
it appears likely that few important references of any kind, as of the time of
closing compilation, would not be found carefully indexed in their appropriate
position in the guide. It is an excellent supplement to the annual Handbooks
of Latin American Studies.
Perhaps an author index would have added considerably to the utility of
the guide, although admittedly it would also add considerably to its bulk and,
presumably, expense. As to the latter aspect, it is unfortunate that the Miami
Press considered it necessary to charge the price it does: it inevitably will limit
the breadth of circulation.
RUSSELL H. FITZGIBBON
University of California, Los Angeles
Locke On War and Peace. By RICHARD H. Cox. (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1960. Pp. xiii, 220. $5.60.)
There has been no end of studies of Locke’s theories and influence on in-
tellectual history. Fortunately, this is one of the better analyses of Locke’s
papers and of his Two Treatises of Government. It is a valuable interpretation
of his concept of the state of nature as applied to international relations. It
shows that Locke equates the state of nature with the state of war; that the
so-called law of nature is a construct of the mind; that peace, and the political
order on which peace depends, are artifices; and that the end of political
society is the creation of power-economic, political, and military-to protect
itself in an anarchic world.
Since there is nothing particularly new about Locke’s theories, Cox’s real
contribution lies in his introductory and concluding chapters. His introductory
chapter reveals Locke’s critical connection between the persecuting tendencies
of Locke’s time, his inordinate caution, and the literary techniques he employed
to veil his...

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