Pessimism
Pessimism is the attitude or philosophical stance that anticipates negative outcomes as more probable than positive ones, or holds that suffering and evil inherently outweigh good and happiness in existence.[1] In philosophy, it often contends that life possesses negative value overall, with non-existence preferable to continued being due to inescapable suffering driven by insatiable desires.[2] Arthur Schopenhauer, a central figure in this tradition, portrayed the world as propelled by a blind, striving "will" that generates perpetual dissatisfaction, rendering optimism illusory and ascetic denial or aesthetic contemplation as partial escapes.[3] Psychologically, pessimism manifests as a cognitive bias toward overestimating threats and underestimating successes, correlating with heightened depression risk yet also enabling adaptive strategies like defensive pessimism, where anticipating worst-case scenarios motivates thorough preparation and reduces anxiety through contingency planning.[4][5] Empirical studies reveal pessimism's dual-edged nature: chronic forms impair well-being and physical health via stress pathways, but balanced or strategic variants foster resilience by aligning expectations with realistic constraints, countering undue optimism that can lead to underpreparation or denial of evident risks.[6] Controversies arise in its cultural reception, where institutional biases in academia and media may undervalue pessimism's grounding in observable human history—marked by recurrent conflict, scarcity, and mortality—favoring narratives of indefinite progress despite countervailing data on persistent global challenges.[7]