Locke believed that we are born without innate knowledge, with an empty mind, a tabula rasa. |
They are all products of the false belief that we are born with empty minds, a tabula rasa. |
It's the 1880s, and the West is still a tabula rasa, a never-ending sea of verdant prairies, rolling valleys and panoramic skies. |
The paradoxical implication is of a specific radicalized and gendered tabula rasa. |
So, for Locke, the human mind was a tabula rasa, a blank slate upon which experience records itself as human knowledge. |
She tries to explain the difference between abhinaya and bhava and rasa in the present volume. |