Gosala
Mankhaliputta was an ascetic teacher of ancient India who was born in 484
BCE. His contemporaries included
Siddhartha Gautama, the founder of Buddhism, and Mahavira, the 24th
and last Tirthankara of Jainism. Gosala was
the leader of a group who believed in fatalism.
Fatalism is the belief that all events are predetermined and therefore inevitable.
The
ancient Indian philosophy and ascetic movement called Ajivikas believed in fatalism
as well. It held that a person’s
reincarnation was determined by a precise and impersonal cosmic principle
called niyati. Niyati was completely
independent of a person’s actions; it was not dependent on karma.
This
form of fatalism had intriguing implications.
If all future occurrences were rigidly determined, then coming events could
be said to exist already. The future
existed in the present, and both existed in the past. Time, therefore, was illusory. All phases of a process were always
present. Nothing was destroyed and
nothing was produced. If all things were
already determined, it meant that their change and development were likewise an
illusion.
What
attitude should one assume if he agrees with fatalism? An option is amor fati. Amor fati is a Latin phrase meaning roughly
“love of fate” or “love of one’s fate.”
It describes an attitude in which a person sees everything that happens
in his life, including any suffering and loss he may experience, as good, or,
at the very least, necessary. They are
the facts of his life and so are always “necessarily there,” whether he likes them
or not. As a result he is accepting and content with
his life.
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