Definition
The belief that all events are already decided by fate or destiny and that humans have no power to change what will happen.
Etymology
From 'fatal' (related to fate) combined with the philosophy suffix '-ism'. The term comes from Latin 'fatalis' meaning destined by fate, and became a formal philosophical doctrine in the 16th-17th centuries.
Kelly Says
Fatalism is philosophically wild because it creates a paradox: if everything is fated, are your beliefs about fatalism also fated? And if so, does it matter that you believe it? The philosophy basically argues itself into a logical corner.
Translations
BNবাংলা
মৃত্যু-নির্ধারণ
mrityu-nidharon
CACatalà
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
CSČeština
fatalismus
fa-ta-li-muhs
DADansk
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
DEDeutsch
Fatalismus
fa-ta-li-muhs
ELΕλληνικά
φασματισμός
fasmatismos
ESEspañol
fatalismo
fa-ta-li-smo
FISuomi
fatalismi
fa-ta-li-smi
FRFrançais
fatalisme
fa-ta-lizm
HEעברית
גְּזֵרָה
g'zeirah
HIहिन्दी
नियतिवाद
niyativaad
HUMagyar
fatalizmus
fa-ta-li-zmuhs
IDBahasa Indonesia
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
ITItaliano
fatalismo
fa-ta-li-smo
MSBahasa Melayu
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
NLNederlands
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
NONorsk
fatalisme
fa-ta-li-sme
PLPolski
fatalizm
fa-ta-lizm
PTPortuguês
fatalismo
fa-ta-li-smo
RORomână
fatalism
fa-ta-li-sm
RUРусский
Fatalizm
fa-ta-lizm
SVSvenska
fatalism
fa-ta-lizm
SWKiswahili
fatalism
fa-ta-li-zm
THไทย
ลัทธิความเชื่อมั่น
lat-thi kwan-cheu man
TLTL
fatalismo
fa-ta-li-smo
TRTürkçe
fatalizm
fa-ta-lizm
UKУкраїнська
фаталізм
fatalizm
VITiếng Việt
tư tưởng định mệnh
tu tuong dinh menh