The subject of this book is the epistemology of religion, and it discusses a wide spectrum of analytic, scholastic and apologetic philosophy and theology in order to argue for the following thesis: apart from religious experience, it cannot be evident (in a defined sense of psychological impossibility) that the Trinity doctrine is logically possible. Hence, this conclusion is drawn deductively. Apart from religious experience, it cannot be evident that Christianity or the Trinity doctrine have non-minimal logical probability.
As the author points out, however, they still may be justified, well-argued, plausibly logically probable, and probable in other than the logical sense.
The book will be of interest to philosophers of religion, analytic theologians, and researchers in analytic scholasticism.