English, asked by alenjose222, 5 months ago

Give a short note on fatalism based on your experience?​

Answers

Answered by mayank681753
1

Answer:

Fatalism, the attitude of mind which accepts whatever happens as having been bound or decreed to happen. Such acceptance may be taken to imply belief in a binding or decreeing agent. The development of this implication can be found in ancient Greek and Roman mythology, with its personification of Fate, and in Norse mythology with the Norns.

__--__mayank's HELP__--__

Answered by Anonymous
0

 \huge \rm \pink{\underline{\underline {\blue{answer}}}}

⭐⭐

An ancient philosophy claiming that the future is inevitable – that certain things are going to happen, and no choices you make can change that. And although the philosophy technically applies to all kinds of futures, we usually only invoke fatalism when resigning ourselves to futures we wouldn’t choose – after all, nobody needs a philosophy to cope with good fortune!

᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐

᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐

 

⭐⭐

However, we might become fatalists based on a variety of ideas:

  • God or gods have plans for us, that they are going to enforce.

  • God is omniscient, which means that the future is already known to Her, so how could change?

  • Because of causality — i.e. because of determinism.

  • Because of logic: statements about the future must be either true or false, and must have always been true or false (supposedly, but not really).

᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐

᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐᳐

 

HOPE THIS IS HELPFUL ✅⭐

BE BRAINLY ☃️

Similar questions