Amor Fati


The Latin phrase "love of fate" — embracing everything that happens, including suffering, not merely tolerating it.

By the ReadGlobe Editors
Originated with Friedrich Nietzsche

What it means

Though the Stoics practised acceptance of fate, Nietzsche sharpened it into amor fati: not resignation but active love of one's life exactly as it is, "not merely to bear what is necessary... but to love it." Paired with eternal recurrence, it becomes a test of affirmation — would you will this moment to return forever? To live by amor fati is to stop dividing experience into the welcome and the unwelcome, and to treat even loss as part of a life one would choose again.


Not merely to bear what is necessary but to love it — every loss part of a life you'd choose again.

How it applies

  • A reframing practice for setbacks: ask what the obstacle makes possible
  • A bridge between Stoic acceptance and a more affirmative, creative stance
  • A daily discipline of saying "yes" to the given rather than the wished-for

The deeper point

Amor fati is the hardest idea in philosophy to fake. You can perform acceptance, but loving your fate — including the parts that hurt — can’t be willed directly. It’s the by-product of a life you would actually choose again, not a mantra you repeat.

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Frequently asked


What does amor fati mean?
"Love of fate" — the ideal of embracing everything that happens, including suffering, not merely tolerating it but affirming it as necessary to one’s life. Nietzsche pushed the Stoic idea into active love.
Who came up with amor fati?
Nietzsche made the phrase famous in The Gay Science and Ecce Homo, but the attitude descends from Stoics like Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, who urged accepting what is not in our control.
How do you practise amor fati?
By reframing setbacks as material rather than misfortune — asking not "why me?" but "what does this make possible?" It is active affirmation, not passive resignation.

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The book behind this idea: Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche. Hear the whole thing free — start an Audible trial and your first audiobook is on the house.

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APA

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MLA

"Amor Fati." ReadGlobe, readglobe.com/idea/amor-fati/.

Primary source: Wikipedia

Summary based on Nietzsche's Ecce Homo and The Gay Science (public domain).