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the fatalism
noun
The doctrine that all events are subject to fate or inevitable necessity, or determined in advance in such a way that human beings cannot change them.
Exact(59)
While it's a grisly scene, it's not so much the fatalities that are alien and troubling as the fatalism — far more so than a meowing child.
Why the fatalism?
Religion plays into the fatalism.
I loved how this represented the fatalism of the piece.
She was surprised at the fatalism with which she had resigned herself to her transformation.
The fatalism here may be science-driven, but still it boggles the mind.
The fatalism displayed by the "superfluous man" heralded the nihilism of modern revolutionary terror.
Grasping for answers, many have fallen into the fatalism common to survivors of disasters.
Bragg's musical prose evokes the fatalism and poverty of life in a Southern mill town.
These shocks, he argues, broke through the fatalism and convinced the Japanese elite that something must be done.
Two championships in the last decade had seemed, at last, to wring the fatalism out of Boston's fans.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com