Abstract

Abstract This chapter describes a logic of relative sameness within which the doctrine of Trinity is both statable and provably consistent. It explores one way of replying to the charge that Christians are either simple polytheists or else polytheists and monotheists at the same time. It explicitly rejects the supposed examples of nontheological cases of relative identity. It does not commit to a pure doctrine of relative identity, nor to the view that the logic it constructs has utility outside of Christian theology. Its goal is simply to provide a way of stating the doctrine of the Trinity that is demonstrably free from contradiction.

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