'There is an abundance of insight into the Christian faith in this very brief book ... Returnings is a luminous work that speaks with integrity and creativity to our sense of anticipation and mystery in the face of life-after-death.' --Values and Visions
This book opens up alternative ways of thinking and talking about ways in which a person can "know" a subject (in this case, mathematics), leading to a reconsideration of what it may mean to be a teacher of that subject. In a number of European languages, a distinction is made in ways of knowing that in the English language is collapsed into the singular word know. In French, for example, to know in the savoir sense is to know things, facts, names, how and why things work, and so on, whereas to know in the connaître sense is to know a person, a place, or even a thing—namely, an other— in such a way that one is familiar with, or in relationship with this other. Primarily through phenomenological reflection with a touch of empirical input, this book fleshes out an image for what a person’s connaître knowing of mathematics might mean, turning to mathematics teachers and teacher educators to help clarify this image.
Corrie recovers from amnesia and is able to on to aid the Union cause in the Civil War. But will she discover the answers to life's most important questions?