Brains do not evolve and then function as a sort of tabula rasa, molded and formed by culture. |
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The polyp lived on top of a tabula in a depression in the top of the coral called the calyx. |
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It's the 1880s, and the West is still a tabula rasa, a never-ending sea of verdant prairies, rolling valleys and panoramic skies. |
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The paradoxical implication is of a specific radicalized and gendered tabula rasa. |
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If not exactly a tabula rasa, I am comparatively ignorant of current scientific knowledge and epistemology. |
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They championed the opposing view that the developing human brain is a tabula rasa. |
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The mind was a tabula rasa, asserted the British writer John Locke, a clean slate awaiting the imprint of sensory data. |
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Locke believed that we are born without innate knowledge, with an empty mind, a tabula rasa. |
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So, for Locke, the human mind was a tabula rasa, a blank slate upon which experience records itself as human knowledge. |
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They are all products of the false belief that we are born with empty minds, a tabula rasa. |
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Dr. Money believed that infants were born psychosexually tabula rasa, their gender identity something they gained later from their parents and society. |
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If we presume that really young children are somehow just a tabula rasa, a blank slate that we can write on and form in our own image, then we're greatly misguided. |
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While we are all born with a certain genetic make-up, ultimately we are a society of learners, meaning that we are born tabula rasa and develop habits through imitation. |
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So the field started out again as a tabula rasa, and when that happens all kinds of mistakes and blunders can creep in. |
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How stunning that low information voters would essentially be tabula rasa as late as October, am I right? |
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Our colleague says that everything will be handed over from one entity to another and that it will be tabula rasa. |
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This was Champlain's dream-to create a smart and caring society in tabula rasa of the New World. |
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Urszula Antoniak: Both characters are tabula rasa. We know nothing about their past or motivations. |
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This traditional method of teaching perceives the teacher as having the monopoly of knowledge while the learners are tabula rasa. |
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They are not overawed by what their elders had done in their capacity as pioneers, nor do they attempt to make tabula rasa of the past. |
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The philosopher John Locke expounded the view that the mind was a blank slate, or tabula rasa, upon which ideas made impressions. |
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This objection notwithstanding, we seem to be somewhat intellectually path dependent, and not at all tabula rasa, at least not by the age of consent. |
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He is immediately answered by the female spectator who is obviously up-to-date with recent critical developments and the Lockean notion of tabula rasa. |
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And today, they appear like the tabula rasa regularly needed to refresh a medium. |
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An extensive account of the native tribes in Dacia can be found in the ninth tabula of Europe of Ptolemy's Geography. |
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Their corresponding teachings must be unified, without trying to make the journey that made by the First World, both regarding religion and education, resorting to the tabula rasa strategy. |
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The values of past art, tradition, should in no way be curtailed, but when viewing art of the new era one should never proceed from tradition, but should first make tabula rasa within himself. |
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Allon thought he was creating a tabula rasa for new borders. |
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Witness the currently vanishing street frontages of Smithdown Road and Kensington and the mournful spectacle of the Edge Lane tabula rasa. |
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But the broad West Side Highway, formerly a bustling harbourfront, still feels like a tabula rasa. |
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It is not like in the sensualist conception or like in the old conception of the consciousness as a tabula rasa free of contents, where everything is provided from the outside. |
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Because of this historical grounding, however, the education system could not be built up from scratch after the earthquake on a tabula rasa basis, since its foundations lay in the country's rich and diverse culture. |
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Prima Europe tabula One of the earliest surviving copies of Ptolemy's 2nd century map of the British Isles. |
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Many in positions of liturgical responsibility, with no musical education as regards technique or aesthetics, have come to believe in a tabula rasa, denying any lineage whatsoever. |
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Ground Zero in Manhattan, tabula rasa in Grozny, political famine in North Korea and Zambia: handcrafted or institutional terror imposes itself both in Asia and in Africa. |
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Rejecting the idea of development on a tabula rasa basis, they stressed the principle that Haiti should be reborn, in other words, developed primarily on the basis of Haitian resources, capacities and skills. |
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He postulated that, at birth, the mind was a blank slate or tabula rasa. |
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The Franks are mentioned in the Tabula Peutingeriana, an atlas of Roman roads. |
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Ptolemy's maps reflect generally the same tribal names as the Tabula Peutingeriana, except that the Tabula does not mention the Sicambri. |
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This difference suggests that, in the few decades between the Ptolemaic map and the Tabula, the Sicambri were absorbed by the Franks. |
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This engraved double hemisphere map, Orbis Terrarum Nova et Accuratissima Tabula, was created by Nicolaes Visscher in 1658 in Amsterdam. |
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Garriott is the creator of Tabula Rasa, a massively multiplayer online PC game that explores the destruction of Earth. |
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There are references to the Tabula Peutingeriana, but it appears that the Dacian map of the Tabula was completed after the final triumph of Roman nationality. |
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The second and final movement of Tabula Rasa is called Silentium. |
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