The Problem of Evil and the Problem of Consciousness
European Journal for Philosophy of Religion January 30, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.69574/aejpr.v2i4.26509 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
A philosophical argument proposes that the problem of evil (whether evil undermines belief in God) and the problem of consciousness (how consciousness arises from physical processes) are actually versions of the same underlying issue, called the "problem of ontological expectation mismatch." Recognizing this shared root offers a new way to evaluate existing approaches to both problems systematically. The thesis is then used to critically examine panpsychism, a popular recent response to the problem of consciousness.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | The problem of evil and the problem of consciousness are versions of the same problem, the problem of ontological expectation mismatch. |
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Abstract
The problem of evil and the problem of consciousness occupy central positions in the philosophy of religion and the philosophy of mind, respectively. On the face of it, these problems seem to be fundamentally distinct. The problem of evil is concerned with whether the existence of evil in the world undermines belief in the existence of God while the problem of consciousness concerns the nature of consciousness and how it can arise from physical processes in the brain. In this paper, however, I defend the following novel thesis: the problem of evil and the problem of consciousness are versions of the same problem, which I term the “problem of ontological expectation mismatch.” I argue that, by recognizing that they stem from the same root, we can gain a fresh perspective for evaluating existing approaches to both problems in a systematic manner. I conclude my discussion by utilizing this thesis to critically examine panpsychism, a response to the problem of consciousness that has recently gained significant popularity.