Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Empty Space: Beginning from Emptiness

Usefulness comes from emptiness; starting before ready means beginning from openness and receptivity rather than fullness.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching teaches that a cup is useful because of its emptiness, a room because of its space. Laozi recognizes that form derives its function from the emptiness it contains. When starting before ready, this principle suggests beginning from a state of openness rather than attempting to fill yourself with knowledge first. An empty beginner's mind is more useful than a mind crowded with assumptions about how things should be. This emptiness is not ignorance but receptivity—the capacity to notice what actually happens rather than what you expected. In learning, it means diving into practice with minimal theory. In innovation, it means letting problems speak rather than imposing pre-formed solutions. In communication, it means listening from emptiness rather than waiting to inject your ideas. The paradox is that starting with the least means you learn the most, because your empty space can be filled by actual experience rather than imagined preparation. Emptiness is the most fertile beginning.

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