<i>A Grammar of Consent</i. broadens John Henry Newman's argument for the existence of God to include more experiential materials reflecting two millennia of Christian philosophy. Nichols provides a beneficial corrective to a common contemporary narrowness in limiting experiential arguments to those dealing with some sort of distinctively religious experience. The book will be of interest to students and teachers in philosophy of religion theology history of ideas and the wider philosophically and theologically interested public.
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