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  • Fatalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Fatalism is a philosophical doctrine emphasizing the subjugation of all events or actions to fate or inevitable predetermination. Fatalism generally refers to several of the ...

  • fatalism - Definitions from Dictionary.com

    noun . 1. the acceptance of all things and events as inevitable; submission to fate: Her fatalism helped her to face death with stoic calm.

  • Fatalism

    Home Other Papers on Free Will Applied Naturalism Philosophy . 3 Strikes Against Fatalism. Here are three brief sallies against the ...

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Fatalism

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Fatalism, doctrine that all events occur according to a fixed and inevitable destiny that individual will neither controls nor affects. Fatalism frequently is confused with determinism, the doctrine that events are determined by the events that precede them. According to fatalism, preceding events have no causal connection with the events that follow. A fated event takes place not according to a natural law but in accordance with some mysterious decree issued by some mysterious power, perhaps ages before. Determinism, in its tenet that every event has its determining conditions in its immediate antecedents, which may include the human will, is consistent with a belief in the efficacy of the human will, but fatalism is not. Both fatalism and determinism, thus distinguished from each other, should likewise be distinguished from predestination. Predestination is determination plus the belief in a supernatural power that has established a determining natural sequence of causes. Fatalism is a belief in a supernatural power that predetermines without recourse to natural order.

Fatalism appeared among the ancient Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans and today is particularly prevalent among Muslims. In the modern Occident, though, it has retained a degree of acceptance only where science has not had a controlling influence in developing the doctrine of causality.



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