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fatalistycznych

Fatalistyczny is a Polish adjective describing things related to fatalism, the philosophical view that events are predetermined and human actions cannot alter fixed outcomes. The term is used to characterize beliefs, attitudes, or analyses viewed as governed by fate rather than by human effort. In philosophy, a fatalistyczny stanowisko or pogląd holds that the future is inevitable and independence from human agency. In psychology and sociology, the label can describe a resigned or deterministic worldview, sometimes linked to coping styles or cultural narratives emphasizing inevitability.

Etymology and form: fatalistyczny derives from fatalizm (fatalism) from the Latin fatum, meaning fate. Polish adjectives

Usage notes: The term is common in academic writing about belief systems and in discussions of determinism

See also: fatalizm, determinizm, poglądy.

formed
with
the
suffix
-yczny
express
a
relationship
to
the
root
concept.
The
form
fatalistycznych
is
the
genitive
plural
(and,
in
some
contexts,
accusative
plural)
of
the
adjective,
used
when
describing
a
plural
noun
in
those
cases,
for
example:
definicje
przekonań
fatalistycznych
(definitions
of
fatalistic
beliefs).
versus
free
will.
It
also
appears
in
everyday
language
to
describe
a
resigned
or
pessimistic
stance
toward
outcomes,
as
in
a
fatalistyczna
postawa.
While
related
to
determinism,
fatalism
generally
emphasizes
the
futility
of
influencing
events
through
action,
rather
than
the
causal
explanation
of
events.