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fatalism
[feyt-l-iz-uhm]
noun
the acceptance of all things and events as inevitable; submission to fate.
Her fatalism helped her to face death with stoic calm.
Philosophy., the doctrine that all events are subject to fate or inevitable predetermination.
fatalism
/ ˈfeɪtəˌlɪzəm /
noun
the philosophical doctrine that all events are predetermined so that man is powerless to alter his destiny
the acceptance of and submission to this doctrine
a lack of effort or action in the face of difficulty
Other Word Forms
- fatalist noun
- fatalistic adjective
- fatalistically adverb
Compare Meanings
How does fatalism compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
It’s a luxury, a quantum leap, one that can save your imagination from a propensity to meek fatalism or received social patterns.
One that refuses both fatalism and false neutrality.
Today, realism tells us that the future will get worse before it might get better – and it can only get better if we reject fatalism and get on with organizing.
Much of that has to do with the way he holds hope in one hand and fatalism in the other, but Cassian borrows plenty of sorrow from the people surrounding him.
O’Meara’s children believe she may have harbored a sense of fatalism about what was coming.
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