Christopher J. Phillips is assistant professor and faculty fellow in New York University's Gallatin School of Individualized Study.
"""Phillips's exposition of what the new math meant and how, in practice, it was taught are definite strengths of his book. He reveals unexpected dimensions of the controversy it generated. Its champions in the classroom put more stress on forming free, rational citizens than on raising the level of technical competence in America, while the opposition came not only from defenders of rote learning, but equally from mathematicians who focused on the instrumental value of mathematics for science and technology."" (Theodore M. Porter, University of California, Los Angeles)"""