Addressed to the large body of English men who, while inclined to individualism,'' inconsistently appeal to socialism for the attainment of certain ends which at first sight seem to be unattainable under a regime of freedom." Questions of libel, of cruelty to animals, of copyright, of adulteration, of the relation of the sexes, of rights over land, of nuisance and many others. Mr. Donisthorpe considers difficult to solve straight off on the principle of equal liberty. Still that they may be so solved he shows in nine chapters which discuss many social questions from both the Individualists and Socialists standpoint.