tabula rasa
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A blank slate; an absence of preconceived ideas or predetermined goals: The term refers to a clean, empty surface ready to be written upon, used metaphorically to describe a mind or situation free from prior experience, knowledge, or bias. 2. An opportunity to start over without prejudice: A chance to begin something anew, with no existing conditions or history influencing the start. 3. A young mind not yet affected by experience (according to John Locke): A philosophical concept from empiricism, suggesting the human mind at birth is empty of innate ideas and all knowledge comes from experience and perception.
Usage Examples
- The company was sold, giving the new owners a to rebuild the brand from scratch.
- John Locke's theory proposed that every child is born a .
- Moving to a new country felt like a , a chance to redefine myself.
Advanced Usage
- Used as a philosophical term: Central to debates in epistemology (theory of knowledge) concerning nature versus nurture.
- The debate hinges on whether the mind is a tabula rasa or possesses innate structures.
- Used in artistic or creative contexts: Describes a blank canvas, an empty page, or a pure starting point for creation.
- The composer faced the tabula rasa of the silent concert hall, ready to be filled with music.
Variants and Related Words
- Tabula Rasa (Latin phrase): The term is directly borrowed from Latin, meaning "scraped tablet" or "clean slate," referring to wax tablets in ancient times that could be smoothed and reused.
Synonyms
- Blank slate
- Clean slate
- Fresh start
- Virgin territory
Idioms and Related Phrases
- A clean slate: A very close synonym, often used in everyday language to mean a fresh start with past mistakes forgiven or ignored.
- After the apology, they agreed to wipe the slate clean and begin again.
- Start from scratch: To begin from the very beginning, with no prior work or advantage.
- The hard drive failed, so we had to start the project from scratch.
Noun
- an opportunity to start over without prejudice
- a young mind not yet affected by experience (according to John Locke)