Well, you have a good point when it comes to the interpretation of this basal work, indeed. We agree, I suppose, that the relation of men with the Divine is "plagued by existential doubt" from what follows from his analysis in
Notes from the Underground. I'm habituated to think that it is impossible to apprehend Dostoevsky's work and thought without considering integrally all the aspects, as the biographical, philosophical and theological manners. From this, I argue that the Orthodox anthropology with both Evdokimov and Lossky is strictly valuable, for Dostoevsky has read intensively the Church Fathers throughout his life.
Saint Maximus, the Confessor — an extremely important Father for Eastern thought — wrote:
But he who knows the mystery of the Cross and the Tomb, knows also the essential principles of all things.
Finally, he who penetrates yet further and finds himself initiated into the mystery of the Resurrection, apprehends the end for which God created all things from the beginning.
Gnostic Centuries; I, 66, P.G.
Which suggests the antinomical state of men, that can only be surpassed through κένωσις (kénosis),
i.e. men's polyphonic nature can only gain resolution through the Hypostatic union, considering then the individual-person distinction that can be observed in his short story
Dream of a Ridiculous Man.
This plagued relationship between men and God is what it is because of the assumption of the decay of human integral state, which comes from Patristic teachings, as the Orthodox doctrine of the Fall of Man suggests the rebellion of reason against the
nous can be surpassed through that purification (which kénosis also constitutes the process), finally attaining the "eye of the heart" which makes possible to see the Uncreated Energies of God. The same process can be noticed through his major work, and also is crystal clear (I return) in his short story that I already mentioned.
It was under these circumstances that I suggested that Dostoevsky's
Notes from the Underground gains its resolution within his theological structure.