Metaphors of Mind: Object, Substance, Space
September 12th, 2006 Fred McVittie
- Because of the limitations of an embodied cognition, all abstract thought is inherently metaphorical in nature.
- Mind is a deeply abstract concept, as Claxton says, ‘ you can’t put it up against the wall and take a photo of it’, therefore mind can only be thought of (and spoken of) in metaphorical terms.
- There are a large number of metaphors for the mind and particular mental functions, and these can be grouped into three general categories (which sometimes co-exist, as for example the metaphor of mind as a cloud).
- Object metaphors (machine, body, book, computer etc),
- substance metaphors (solid, gas, liquid)
- spatial metaphors. This last set of metaphors variously imagines mind as existing as a point phenomenon at the centre of lived experience (core, essence etc), a focal point experience associated with the contents of consciousness, a ‘global’ phenomenon in which mind is synonymous with the totality of space.
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