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Jung said, until the unconscious becomes conscious everything is fate. So no to your question because it is not clarity. Fatalism is we are going to die. Clarity is nature alive. It's your text Christian. What did you think jesus was talking about the twilight zone? If I am in the twilight zone then yes you are correct it makes complete sense. Out in nature not at all ALIVE!!! we face the great turn coming up fast, which do you choose nature dead, or nature alive? Choose nature dead and you have not spit the apple out of your mouth. Keep chewing it leads to man's fate, extinction, complete.1) Is fatalism compatible with your religion, or worldview?
a) If so, where does it lead?
b) If not, where is it incompatible?
2) Assuming fatalism is correct, and becomes accepted worldwide- would anything change? What specifically?
Jung said, until the unconscious becomes conscious everything is fate. So no to your question because it is not clarity. Fatalism is we are going to die. Clarity is nature alive. It's your text Christian. What did you think jesus was talking about the twilight zone? If I am in the twilight zone then yes you are correct it makes complete sense. Out in nature not at all ALIVE!!! we face the great turn coming up fast, which do you choose nature dead, or nature alive? Choose nature dead and you have not spit the apple out of your mouth. Keep chewing it leads to man's fate, extinction, complete.
Are you going to die?
The problem with addressing the question of fatalism is that it is not a yes or no issue. There are a number versions of fatalism. It ranges from the simple natural fatalism based on natural determinism to Christian fatalism based on scripture by Calvinist, Jewish and Islamic fatalism, and proposed by Martin Luther and Alvin Plantinga. Some, but not many, equate a sense of hopelessness and possible despair that everything we do has no meaning,
I personally think the 'word' fatalism is out dated and many other philosophical and theological terms address this better, and of course using fatalism in the context of the philosophy or theology that meaningfully applies.
For me, it's really about honoring and appreciating things for what they are instead of constantly demanding (or wanting) them to be something else. There's a serenity and peace in that, as well as a humility in not expecting the universe to conform to your vision of it.
1) Is fatalism compatible with your religion, or worldview?
a) If so, where does it lead?
b) If not, where is it incompatible?
2) Assuming fatalism is correct, and becomes accepted worldwide- would anything change? What specifically?