#Fates

Fatalism

Fatalism is the philosophical belief that all events are predetermined & inevitable, making human “free will” basically irrelevant to the ultimate outcome.

Determinism, predestination, & fatalism are often used interchangeably. But there are nuances:

  • Determinism: The belief that every event is caused by preceding events & the laws of nature. If you knew the position of every atom in the universe, you could predict the future. It’s about cause & effect.
  • Predestination: A theological concept (like we saw with the Calvinists) where a sovereign God has decreed the end from the beginning. It’s about divine will.
  • Fatalism: The belief that “whatever will be, will be” (Amor Fati), regardless of the causes or divine decrees. It suggests that even if you try to change the path, you’ll still arrive at the pre-set destination.

In the Greco-Roman world, Fatalism wasn’t a theory. It was a cosmic reality. The Greeks envisioned fate as 3 sisters: Clotho (the spinner), Lachesis (the allotter), & Atropos (the unturnable, who cut the thread). Even the gods were subject to the Fates.

This created where heroism wasn’t defined by changing one’s fate. But by facing it with dignity. For example, Oedipus tries everything to avoid the prophecy that he’ll kill his dad & marry his mom. His very attempt to flee is what ultimately fulfills it.

The Stoics (like Seneca & Marcus Aurelius) practiced a form of “rational fatalism.” They compared humans to a dog tied to a moving cart. The dog can either trot happily with the cart (accepting fate) or be dragged kicking & screaming. The destination is the same. The only thing you control is your internal attitude.

The most famous challenge to fatalism is the Lazy Argument: If it’s fated that you’ll recover from an illness, you’ll recover whether you call a doctor or not. Philosophers like Chrysippus countered this by arguing that certain outcomes are “co-fated.”

It may be fated that you recover. But it’s also fated that you recover because you called a doctor. Your action is a link in the chain of fate, not an alternative to it.

In Islam, the concept of Qadar emphasizes a balance between divine sovereignty & human responsibility, folk traditions across the Middle East & South Asia have historically leaned toward a “written” destiny (Maktub – “it is written”). This perspective often provided a psychological cushion against the frequent tragedies of the medieval world, like a plagues or invasions.

American culture is infamously anti-fatalistic. The famous “American Dream” is built on the idea that you can pull yourself up by your own bootstraps & be the architect of your own destiny/fortune. However, fatalism does exist in American conscienceness in 2 specific ways:

  • Literary Naturalism
    • In the late 19th & early 20th centuries, American writers like Stephen Crane & Jack London moved away from Romanticism toward Naturalism. They portrayed humans as “small, soft things” at the mercy of indifferent forces (biology, heredity, & environment). In Crane’s The Open Boat, the universe is depicted as a giant machine that doesn’t care if you live or die. This is “Modern Fatalism.”
  • “Appalachian Fatalism
    • Often misunderstood as laziness, this fatalism was a cultural adaptation of the Appalachian region, dominated by dangerous coal mines & unpredictable poverty. If your life depends on a mine roof that could at any moment regardless of your skill, or a boom-or-bust economy you can’t control, a fatalistic worldview (“It’s in God’s hands”) becomes a survival mechanism to manage chronic stress.

In modern physics, the Block Universe theory (based on Einstein’s General Relativity) suggests that time is a dimension just like space. If the past, present, & future all exist simultaneously in a “block,” then the future is technically as fixed & unchangeable as the past. If using this view, our perception of “choosing” is just an illusion created by our movement through the time dimension. Essentially this is Scientific Fatalism.

The philosopher Karl Popper once joked that the fatalist is the person who looks both ways before crossing a 1-way street. Deep down, even those who claim the future is a fixed act, though their choices matter.

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#AmorFati #AppalachianFatalism #Atropos #BlockUniverse #BlockUniverseTheory #Calvinists #Chrysippus #Clotho #Determinism #Early20thCentury #Fatalism #Fates #FreeWill #Greeks #Islam #JackLondon #KarlPopper #Kismet #Lachesis #Late19thCentury #LazyArgument #LiteraryNaturalism #Maktub #MarcusAurelius #MiddleEast #ModernFatalism #Moirai #Naturalism #Oedipus #Predestination #Qadar #RationalFatalism #Romanticism #ScientificFatalism #Seneca #SouthAsia #StephenCrane #Stoics #TheOpenBoat

ཧᜰ꙰ꦿ➢Soul Tenders༒

By Serena Lindahl

In the words of her schoolmaster, Kiarra is an erratic disaster. In the well-ordered and balanced society of the kingdom of Megreria, she is a failure. Every person in Megreria has an occupation in a specific House and a designated Soul Match.

Not Kiarra. She has delayed her exams until the last allowable minute, but her mind refuses to focus on one House. When she meets one man from each of the five Houses, her inability to choose extends to her heart. The rules demand she choose though, one House and one man.

What happens when she feels drawn to all five Houses and all five men who have captured her attention, and possibly her heart? Will she be doomed to a life of a Commoner? Will society and the kingdom shun her? Or have the Fates already chosen her destiny?

***This is a slow-burn reverse harem with a strong fantasy plot which includes intrigue, world-building, and character development.***
Start the series here ---> https://a.co/d/6PLnlw7

#rhromance #slowburn #fantasy #intrigue #fates
Kpop News Hubkpopnewshub
2026-01-16
WIST Quotations Has Moved!wist@my-place.social
2025-12-01

A quotation from the Poetic Edda

Thence come the maidens
          mighty in wisdom,
Three from the dwelling
          down ‘neath the tree;
Urth is one named,
          Verthandi the next, —
On the wood they scored, —
          and Skuld the third.
Laws they made there,
          and life allotted
To the sons of men,
          and set their fates.
 
[Þaðan koma meyjar,
          margs vitandi,
þrjár, ór þeim sæ
          er und þolli stendr;
Urð hétu eina,
          aðra Verðandi —
skáru á skíði —
          Skuld ina þriðju;
þær lǫg lǫgðu,
          þær líf kuru
alda bǫrnum,
          ørlǫg seggja.]

Poetic Edda (800-1100) Old Norse anonymous collection of poems
Völuspá [Prophecy of the Völva; Prophecy of the Seeress], st. 20 (AD 961) [tr. Bellows (1936)]

More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/edda-poetic/80492/

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #destiny #fate #fates

myth2mythmyth2myth
2025-11-03

AI-generated content

Destiny isn’t decided by kings.
It’s spun in silence by the Moirai.

🧵 Clotho, Lachesis, Atropos — their loom shapes the world.
youtu.be/15F-vX3emUU

Graeae

In Greek mythology, the Graeae (also spelled Graiai, means ‘old women’). They’re also called the Grey Sisters & the Phorcides (‘daughters of Phorcys’).

They were 3 sisters who had gray hair from birth & shared 1 eye & 1 tooth among the 3 of them. They were the daughters of the primordial sea gods Phorcys & Ceto &, among others, sisters of the Gorgons.

Their names were Deino, Pemphredo, & Enyo. Not to be confused with the war goddess, Enyo.

The Graeae are best known from their experience with Perseus, who, after getting a hold of their lone eye, forced them to tell him information about the Gorgons. By stealing their eye, while they were passing it among themselves, Perseus forced them to tell him the location of the 3 objects needed to unalive, specifically, Medusa. He blackmails the Graeae for the information, if they wanted their eye back, they had to give him the information.

They were combined together with the Moirai/Fates in Disney’s Hercules.

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#Ceto #Deino #Disney #Enyo #Eye #Fates #Gorgons #Graeae #Graiai #GreekMythology #GreySisters #Hercules #Medusa #Moirai #Pemphredo #Perseus #Phorcides #Phorcys #PrimordialSeaGods

Moirai

In ancient Greek religion & mythology, the Moirai (a.k.a. in English as the Fates) were the personification of destiny.

There were 3 sisters named: Clotho, who was the spinner; Lachesis, who was the allotter; & Atropos, who was the inevitable, a symbol for death. Their Roman equals are the Parcae.

The Moirai’s role was to make sure that every being, mortal & divine, lived out their destinies. For mortals, this destiny went their entire lives & is pictured as a thread spun from a spindle. A spindle is the thing that Sleeping Beauty touched to become Sleeping Beauty.

Usually, they were considered to be above even the gods, in their role as enforcers of Fate. Zeus was even scared of them. Even though, in some stories, Zeus is able to command them. But these are rare.

The word Moirai (also spelt Moirae or Moerae) comes from Ancient Greek. This means “lots, destinies, apportioners.” It also means a portion, or lot of the whole.

In Dante’s Divine Comedy, the Fates are mentioned in both Inferno & Purgatorio by their Greek names. In Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the Weird Sisters (or 3 Witches) are prophetesses, who are deeply rooted in both the real & supernatural worlds.

The Moirai are:

  • Clotho, the spinner. She spun the thread of life from her distaff onto her spindle. Her Roman equal was Nona (“the 9th”), who was originally called upon in the 9th month of pregnancy.
  • Lachesis, the allotter or drawer of lots. She measured the thread of life allotted to each person with her measuring rod. Her Roman equal was Decima (“the 10th”).
  • Atropos, “inexorable,” or inevitable,” literally “unturning.” She was the cutter of the thread of life. She chose the manner of each person’s death. When their time has come, she would cut their life-thread with her shears. Think about the end of Disney’s Hercules, when our main man, Herc, went to save Meg from Hades’ domain. Herc’s life-thread turned gold when he saved. Her Roman equal was Morta (“the dead one”).

In the Republic of Plato, the 3 Moirai sing together with the music of the Seirenes. Lachesis sings the things that were, Clotho the things that are, & Atropos the things that are to be. Pindar, in his Hymn to the Fates, holds them in high honor. He calls them to send their sisters, the Hours (Eunomia, “lawfulness”; Dike, “right”; & Eirene, “peace”), to stop the internal civil strife.

In the Theogony, Hesiod describes the Moirai as daughters of the primeval goddess Nyx (“night”), & the sisters of the Keres (“the black fates”), Thanatos (“death”), & Nemesis (“retribution”). Later in the poem, Hesiod instead calls them daughters of Zeus & the Titaness Themis (“the Institutor”), who was the embodiment of divine order & law. This places them as sisters of the Hours.

In the cosmogony of Alcman (7th century BC), first came Thetis (“disposer, creation”) & then simultaneously Poros (“path”) & Tekmor (“end post, ordinance”). Poros is related to the end of all things.

Later, in the Orphic cosmogony, first came Thesis, whose ineffable nature is unexpected. Ananke (“necessity”) is the primeval goddess of inevitability who is entwined with the time-god Chronos, at the very beginning of time. They represented the cosmic forces of Fate & Time. They were sometimes called to control the fates of the gods. The 3 Moirai are daughters of Ananke.

In the Theogony of Hesiod, the 3 Moirai are personified as the daughters of Nyx & are acting the gods. Later they were daughters of Zeus & Themis, who was the embodiment of divine order & law. In Pluto’s Republic, the 3 Fates are daughters of Ananke (necessity).

The Moirai were supposed to appear 3 nights after a kid’s birth to determine the course of its life. At Sparta, the Temple to the Moirai stood near the communal hearth of the polis. Polis means “city” in Ancient Greek.

As the goddesses of birth who even prophesied the fate of the newly born, Elieithyia, the ancient Minoan goddess of childbirth & divine midwifery, was their companion.

The Erinyes, a group of chthonic goddesses of vengeance, served as tools of the Moirai. Chthonic means concerning, belonging to, or inhabiting the underworld. They inflicted punishment for evil deeds, particularly upon those who sought to avoid their rightful destiny. The Morai were confused with the Erinyes, as well as the death-goddesses, the Keres.

In earlier times, they were pictured as only a few, or perhaps only 1, individual goddess Homer’s Illiad speaks generally of the Moira, who spins the thread of life for men at their birth. She’s Moria Krataia, “powerful Moira,” or there are several Moirai.

In the Odyssey, there’s a reference to the Klothes, or spinners. At Delphi, only the Fates of Birth & Death were revered. In Athens, Aphrodite was called Aphrodite Urania, the “eldest of the Fates.”

In the older myths, they’re daughters of primeval beings like Nyx (“night”) in Theogony, or Ananke in Orphic cosmogony.

The Moirai could be placated as goddesses. Brides in Athens offered them locks of hair, & women swore by them. They may have originated as a birth goddesses & only later their reputation as the agents of destiny. The Moirai were also credited to be the inventors of 7 Greek letters – A, B, H, I, T, & Y.

The Fates had at least 3 known temples: Ancient Corinth, Sparta, & Thebes. The temple in Sparta was situated next to the grave/tomb of Orestes.

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#7thCenturyBC #Alcman #Allotter #Ananke #AncientGreek #Aphrodite #AphroditeUrania #Athens #Atropos #Chronos #Chtonic #Clotho #Corinth #Dante #DanteSInferno #Death #Decima #Delphi #Destiny #Dike #Disney #DivineComedy #Eirene #Elieithyia #Eunomia #Fate #Fates #Grave #Greek #GreekMythology #Hesiod #Homer #HymnOfTheFates #Illiad #Institutor #Klothes #Lachesis #Macbeth #Midwifery #Moerae #MoiraKrataia #Moirai #Morta #Nemesis #Night #Nona #Nyx #Odyssey #Orestes #Orphic #Parcae #Pindar #Plato #Polis #Poros #Pregnancy #Prophetesses #Purgatorio #Republic #Roman #Seirenes #Shakespeare #Shears #SleepingBeauty #Sparta #Spindle #Spinner #Spinners #Tekmor #Thanatos #TheErinyes #TheHours #TheKeres #TheMoira #TheMoirae #Thebes #Themis #Theogony #Thesis #ThreeWitches #Time #Titaness #tomb #WeirdSisters #Zeus

Monty the cartoonistMontyanddraws@sunny.garden
2025-09-29

Blindly, but with the thread in hand. Under the light of the full moon, they spin, measure, and cut. They don't need to see the world to recognize the thread that binds it all together.Drawing made with ink and graphite.🌑✂️💀🖤✍🏻🎨
#drawing #drawingmythology
#drawingwithink #Fates #GreekMythology #Destiny #DarkArt #TraditionalDrawing #InkAndGraphite #ArtOnInstagram #Witchcraft #Mystery #TheWeavers #MythicalArt #DrawingOfTheDay #montyart

WIST Quotations moves again!WISTquote@zirk.us
2024-08-09

A quotation from Richter, Jean-Paul:

«
The Fates, and Furies, too, glide with linked hands over life, as well as the Graces and Sirens.
 
[Die Parzen und Furien ziehen auch mit verbundnen Händen um das Leben, wie die Grazien und die Sirenen.]
»

Full quote, sourcing, notes:
wist.info/richter-jean-paul/71

#quote #quotes #quotation #anger #desire #destiny #experience #fates #furies #graces #life #love #siren #vengeance #virtue

2024-05-01

Yo-kai found in

Here is a list of locations in

Inked Goddess Creations®InkedGoddessCreations
2024-01-17

The Feast of Fate is celebrated from January 17th to 19th!

While the focus was originally Roman goddess triads, this observance can be expanded to include triple goddesses, triads, and trinities from cultures around the world.

bit.ly/3tVQlm8

A graphic about the ancient Feast of Fate from Inked Goddess Creations.
genXcrone (she/her)genXcrone@fandom.garden
2024-01-10

For reasons, I am gathering pictorial representations of The Fates in media. What do you have for me?

#Fates #Norns #Moirai #Parcae

If the #fates know what I want for #Christmas they’ll send me shit instead.

How can I get around this?

#Dilemma
#Religion
#Metaphysics

If the #fates know what I want for #Christmas they’ll send me shit instead

How can I get around this?

#Dilemma #Religion #Metaphysics

Aileen Gaborropoetsdreamblog
2023-11-23

Here's a poem I use to write when I was working. No idea what inspired it, hope you like it though. Enjoy.

poetsdream.blog/2021/03/14/sha

Steve Dustcircle 🌹dustcircle
2023-10-20

love saying that have no way to explain - which is strange, because it’s practically impossible to reconcile their concept of with free will. If he made everything knowing what would come of his act of creation, then not only are our determined, but he decided what we would and wouldn’t do before we ever existed. It’s hard if not impossible to resolve this problem.

youtube.com/watch?v=1pNd_sb-PIE

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