He is known for his book
Theologiae Christianae Principia Mathematica (
Mathematical Principles of Christian Theology), published in 1698. In the aforementioned book, Craig presents a
formula that describes how the
probability of a historical event depends on the number of primary witnesses, on the chain of transmission through secondary witnesses, on the elapsed time and on the spatial distance. Using this formula, Craig derived that the probability of the story of
Jesus would reach 0 in the year 3150. This year he interpreted as the
Second Coming of Christ because of verse 18:8 in the
Gospel of Luke. His work was poorly received and controversial at the time. Several later mathematicians complained about his imprecise use of probability and the unsupported derivation of his formula.
Stephen Stigler, in his 1999 book (see references, below) gave a more favorable interpretation, pointing out that some of Craig's reasoning can be justified if his "probability" is interpreted as the
log-likelihood ratio. ==Logarithms==