pandemonism

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) Belief that every object (animate or inanimate), idea (abstract or concrete), and action is inhabited by its own independent supernatural spirit; worship of such spirits.
 * 2) Belief in a universe that is infused with an evil spirit.
 * 3) * 1987, Friedrich Schelling in Ernst Behler, Philosophy of German Idealism, p. 235:
 * While this ancillary thought explains evil in the world, it also completely extinguishes the good and introduces pandemonism instead of pantheism.
 * 1) Belief in a universe that is infused with an evil spirit.
 * 2) * 1987, Friedrich Schelling in Ernst Behler, Philosophy of German Idealism, p. 235:
 * While this ancillary thought explains evil in the world, it also completely extinguishes the good and introduces pandemonism instead of pantheism.
 * 1) * 1987, Friedrich Schelling in Ernst Behler, Philosophy of German Idealism, p. 235:
 * While this ancillary thought explains evil in the world, it also completely extinguishes the good and introduces pandemonism instead of pantheism.
 * While this ancillary thought explains evil in the world, it also completely extinguishes the good and introduces pandemonism instead of pantheism.

Usage notes
The second sense is likely a back-formation incorporating the malevolent sense of demon into the originally morally neutral meaning of the word.

Translations

 * German: Pandaemonismus
 * Italian:
 * Portuguese: pandemonismo
 * Spanish: pandemonismo