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单词 fatalism
释义

fatalism


fa·tal·ism

F0048600 (fāt′l-ĭz′əm)n.1. The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.2. Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable.
fa′tal·ist n.fa′tal·is′tic adj.fa′tal·is′ti·cal·ly adv.

fatalism

(ˈfeɪtəˌlɪzəm) n1. (Philosophy) the philosophical doctrine that all events are predetermined so that man is powerless to alter his destiny2. (Philosophy) the acceptance of and submission to this doctrine3. a lack of effort or action in the face of difficulty ˈfatalist n ˌfatalˈistic adj ˌfatalˈistically adv

fa•tal•ism

(ˈfeɪt lˌɪz əm)

n. 1. the acceptance of all things and events as inevitable; submission to fate. 2. the doctrine that all events are subject to fate or inevitable predetermination. [1670–80] fa′tal•ist, n. fa`tal•is′tic, adj. fa`tal•is′ti•cal•ly, adv.

fatalism

the doctrine that all things are subject to fate or inevitable predestination and that man is ultimately unable to prevent inevitabilities. Cf. determinism.fatalist, n.fatalistic, adj.See also: Philosophy
the viewpoints of believers in the doctrine that all things are determined by the nature of existence and beyond human influence. — fatalist, n.fatalistic, adj.See also: Attitudes
Thesaurus
Noun1.fatalism - a submissive mental attitude resulting from acceptance of the doctrine that everything that happens is predetermined and inevitableacceptance, credence - the mental attitude that something is believable and should be accepted as true; "he gave credence to the gossip"; "acceptance of Newtonian mechanics was unquestioned for 200 years"
2.fatalism - a philosophical doctrine holding that all events are predetermined in advance for all time and human beings are powerless to change themdeterminism - (philosophy) a philosophical theory holding that all events are inevitable consequences of antecedent sufficient causes; often understood as denying the possibility of free will

fatalism

noun resignation, acceptance, passivity, determinism, stoicism, necessitarianism, predestinarianism Complacent fatalism has become fashionable.
Translations
宿命论

fate

(feit) noun1. (sometimes with capital) the supposed power that controls events. Who knows what fate has in store (= waiting for us in the future)? 命運 命运,宿命 2. a destiny or doom, eg death. A terrible fate awaited her. 結局,死亡 结局ˈfatalism noun the belief that fate controls everything, and man cannot change it. 宿命論 宿命论ˈfatalist noun a person who believes in fatalism. He is a complete fatalist – he just accepts everything that happens to him. 宿命論者 宿命论者ˌfataˈlistic adjective 宿命論的 宿命论的ˈfated adjective controlled or intended by fate. He seemed fated to arrive late wherever he went. 命定的,註定的 命中注定的ˈfateful adjective involving important decisions, results etc. At last the fateful day arrived. 決定性的 决定性的

fatalism


fatalism

1. the philosophical doctrine that all events are predetermined so that man is powerless to alter his destiny 2. the acceptance of and submission to this doctrine

Fatalism

 

a world view wherein every event and every human action is regarded as the inevitable realization of what was preordained from the beginning, thus excluding free choice and chance. Three basic types of fatalism may be distinguished: mythological fatalism, or what later became the fatalism of the man in the street, which equates predestination with irrational and unfathomable fate; theological fatalism, in which predestination is regarded as the will of an almighty deity; and rational fatalism, which merged with mechanistic determinism and which views predestination as the inexorable linking of cause and effect within a closed system of causality.

Mythological fatalism, which was a universal feature of early human culture, was subsequently relegated to the marginal categories of thought and was manifested in such “occult” doctrines as astrology; it recurs in periods of decadence or transition such as late Greco-Roman times and the late Renaissance, and an example of its revival in the 20th century can be found in bourgeois society’s fascination with astrology. A new interpretation of this type of fatalism was embodied in the irrational philosophy of life represented by O. Spengler and further elaborated by its advocates, including E. Jünger, G. Benn, and fascist theoreticians.

Theological fatalism holds that men’s destiny is divinely preordained before their birth, some being predestined to “salvation” and others to “perdition.” A consistent formulation of these views can be found in Islam (namely, in the eighth- and ninth-century doctrines of the jabarites), in certain medieval Christian heresies (such as Gottschalk’s in the ninth century), in Calvinism, and in Jansenism. Both the Orthodox and the Catholic Church are opposed to theological fatalism.

Theological fatalism was combined with rational fatalism by G. Pletho. Among the proponents of a strictly rational fatalism were Democritus, Spinoza, Hobbes, and such other mechanistic determinists as Laplace, with his doctrine of the limitless capacity of reason to deduce all future events from full knowledge of the forces of nature at the present moment. A later and philosophically unfounded variant of rational fatalism was that proposed by C. Lombroso, who held that men’s criminal behavior was fate-fully predetermined by their inherited biological makeup—a view that was popular at the turn of the century.

Marxism rejects all forms of fatalism, proposing instead the doctrine of necessity and chance—that is, the dialectics of freedom and necessity in the sociohistorical process.

S. S. AVERINTSEV

fatalism


fatalism

(fāt′ăl-izm) [ fatal + -ism] 1. A person's belief that events will occur regardless of one's efforts.2. The philosophical doctrine that events are predestined or preordained.fatalistic (fāt″ă-lis′tik), adjective

fatalism


  • noun

Synonyms for fatalism

noun resignation

Synonyms

  • resignation
  • acceptance
  • passivity
  • determinism
  • stoicism
  • necessitarianism
  • predestinarianism

Words related to fatalism

noun a submissive mental attitude resulting from acceptance of the doctrine that everything that happens is predetermined and inevitable

Related Words

  • acceptance
  • credence

noun a philosophical doctrine holding that all events are predetermined in advance for all time and human beings are powerless to change them

Related Words

  • determinism
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更新时间:2025/1/11 3:44:48