Language as an Organ of Sense

June 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

We tend to associate the five (or six) senses; touch, smell, hearing, taste, sight, proprioception, with the physical external conduits through which they collect data; the nose, eyes, ears etc. However, it is more accurate to identify these senses with complex somatosensory systems involving mind, brain, and body. The visual sense for example, involves not only the eyes but a network of synaptic pathways and electrochemical activation sequences. The external organ of sight, the eye, is the simplest part of this system and could/will be easily replaced. No such replacement could be made for other parts of the visual system. In this understanding, a particular sensory experience, e.g. sight, is a type of awareness produced by a particular cognitive structure, and it is this cognitive structure which is, for the most part, the ’sense organ’.

This begs the question of whether it is worth considering other types of cognition, other cognitive structures, as sense organs, albeit ones without obvious external conduits for data. A candidate for this consideration is the faculty of language. Like the other senses language organises experience and allows us to categorise and analyse the objects of the world in a particular way. When we describe an object or event we are, in effect, running our words over the object as we might run our hands over it, picking out details and imperfections. We can name and classify an object with words as we might bunch flowers together in colours which our eyes tell us are complementary. We might ‘frame’ an object with our words in such a way that it acquires a repellant property, almost as if it smelled bad. We might write a hymn or a poem to the object so that it seems to sing.

Posted in Language, Poetics, Sense | No Comments »

Embodied Natural Language

August 9th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Natural language contains many terms for concepts which are inherently abstract; justice, love etc. It also contains terms for entities which are beyond the range of human sense; quarks, black holes etc. It also contains terms for entities which are purely theoretical and/or fictitious; ghosts, epicycles, souls, etc. Despite the discorporate nature of these entities, it is apparent that their appearance in language is not discorporate at all. All these concepts, when looked at in the context of their use in sentences and in their definitions expressed in natural language, is made readily embodiable through the application of concrete metaphor. In fact, it might be said that natural language, in its entirety, is a fully embodied system. This contrasts with, for example, the language of mathematics, which is not obviously embodied, (although is it clearly based ultimately on embodied ideas, after Lakoff and Nunez).

Posted in Abstract, Embodiment, Language, Mathematics, Nunez, Rafael | No Comments »

Clean Language vs. Engines of Enquiry

August 13th, 2006 Fred McVittie

A routine part of all language and conversation is metaphor. Most of the time these metaphors are covert and pass unnoticed in speech and other expressive channels. However, within the flow of speech, and particularly in the back and forth of dialogue, metaphors not only convey the content but also structure the shared edifice that houses the conversation. When a subconsciously agreed upon set of metaphors is used, a mutual conceptual framework is built for the dialogue to inhabit. Quite often though, conversation and discourse proceeds not only be mutually agreed upon consilience of metaphor, but by a process of constantly shifting metaphor usage, one replacing the other as it loses usefulness or when the conversation ’stalls’ through the exhaustion of a particular line of metaphorical enquiry. This procedural mixing of metaphors has been referred to as an ‘engine of enquiry’.

In some, very particular, situations, e.g. therapeutic, exploratory etc. this communal exchange of metaphor, whether shared or mixed, is inappropriate. It is sometimes necessary to allow an individual to explore their own ideosyncratic use of metaphor and build/explore their edifice alone. The techniques of clean language originally conceived by David Grove, and developed by Lawley and Tompkins, lends itself to the facilitation of just such individual conceptual discovery.

Posted in Language, Lawley, J. & Tompkins, P., Metaphor, Unconscious | No Comments »

Hypnosis and Performer Training

August 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

This paper will consider the use of Ericksonian Hypnosis techniques and NLP in the training of performers. Performer training is partly a process in which specific overt and transparent physical skills are exchanged; voice projection, the use of the body in particular stage environments, etc. To a greater or lesser extent there may also be training is specific psychophysical techniques; emotional memory, magic if, circles of attention etc. Again these last techniques are transparent and the student is fully aware of what is being taught and the purposes such teaching serves. In addition to these techniques however, I will argue here that there is a level of ‘tuition’ which is inevitably engaged in which is covert, and which the student (and possibly the trainer) has no knowledge of whilst it is taking place. This training constitutes a form of mental ‘reprogramming’ in which the mind set of the student is reorganized. The techniques used in this reprogramming correspond to Ericksonian Hypnosis or NLP, and the purpose of such reprogramming is a change in the belief patterns of the student with a corresponding change in the behaviour of that student.

Posted in Conference Abstract, Language, Performance, Training | No Comments »

Agency and Complexity

September 1st, 2006 Fred McVittie

It is common practice even (especially) for computer specialists, when talking about the behaviour of systems, to use expressions like ‘handshake’, ‘talks to’, ‘finds’, etc. In other words, the language of intention and agency usually reserved for sentient beings. Two observations follow from this. Firstly, it seems that the greater the level of complexity in an entity, the more likely the language used to describe that entity assumes the existence of such agency; when talking of simple systems there is much less tendency to use this language. For example, we would not describe a broken transmission in a car as ‘an inability for the engine to talk to the wheels’. Secondly, it is tempting to argue that this apparent attribution of agency is simply ’shorthand’ and that more accurate descriptions could be given, but this assumption brings its own implications; if it is the case then the suggestion is that ‘agency’ is a simpler concept than the systems which embody that concept, whether applied to computer systems or to other agents.

Posted in Agency, Complexity, Language | No Comments »

Language and Thought (workshop)

September 9th, 2006 Fred McVittie

It is well established that there is a close link between language and thought. It is also established that all languages are broadly similar in their organisation of the relationship between self and world. And while these is likely to be local variations in grammar, syntax, etc reflecting local concerns and experiences (the famous, and aprocryphal, 24 names for snow used by Inuits for example), there is considerably more similarity than difference. All languages, for example, distinguish objects from actions using nouns and verbs, this reflecting a common embodied experience of that world. Various models of the nature of this link have been postulated and also used to propose potential uses for this connection. For example, in the Sapir-Whorf model, thought is assumed to be organised and structured according to the culturally determined organisation of the language. The categories and architecture of thought, according to this theory, are considered not drawn from a universal human nature but from a highly variable cultural experience and the language which peoples use to communicate that experience. The implication of the Sapir-Whorf model is that thought itself could be reconstructed by a careful manipulation of language, and this concept has indeed been exploited in fictions such as the Newspeak of Orwell’s 1984 and in the attempts to produce political correctness by the strategic renaming of concepts which have negative connotations.

The Sapir-Whorf model has been extensively criticised, and it is clear now that the relationship of language and thought is not of this type; changes to cognition cannot simply be made by the renaming or excluding of words from the vocabulary. However, it is certainly possible to exploit the language-thought connection to gain conscious knowledge of one’s thought processes, processes which are often covert, and potentially to use this conscious knowledge in a therapeutic or training context. This type of exploitation also has something of a history, from Freudian psychoanalysis, with its techniques of ‘free-association’ and the concepts of the ‘Freudian Slip’, to the various modern cognitive therapies such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, NLP, Clean Language, etc.

Outside of a training/therapy context, there are various exercises one can carry out to establish for oneself how the organised modification of language affects one’s cognitive state. Using language in non-standard, overtly systematized ways, can have a noticable effect on how one feels, and possibly behaves. The following exercises are examples of such consciousness-modifying language modifications.

  1. Avoid using the word ‘I’ for one week.
  2. Suppress all use of pronouns apart from ‘I’ (refer to everything as ‘I’) for one week.
  3. Avoid the use of nouns, indicate objects by using verbs for one week (as in ‘it is raining’).
  4. Avoid the verb ‘to be’ for one week (this linguistic form is often referred to as ‘e-prime’)
  5. Do not speak at all for one week.

Posted in Exercises, Language | No Comments »

Embodied Meaning in a Neural Theory of Language.

September 12th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Feldman, J. and S. Narayanan (2004). “Embodied Meaning in a Neural Theory of Language.” Brain and Language(89): 385.

This paper puts forward a theory of cognitive meaning in which terms such as ‘grasp’ are understood through an activation of the same neural circuitry that would be employed in actually carrying out the action of grasping. These are the so-called ‘mirror neurons’ identified by Ramachandran and others. Narayanan and Feldman go on to suggest how these same circuits are used in the understanding of these same terms used metaphorically, as when we ‘grasp’ and idea etc. It is further suggested that this same system is in place with other modes of communication and comprehension, particularly the use of gesture.

Posted in Embodiment, Grasp, Language, Metaphor, Neuroscience | No Comments »

Knowing is Seeing

September 29th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The language that we use to articulate knowledge varies according to the form that knowledge takes, the way of knowing, that we are referring to. When we refer to objective, 3rd person knowledge, that which seems to have a clear existence outside of ourselves accessible to independent observers, we use the language of vision; we say that we can see that the knowledge exists. The vision metaphor for knowing conceptualises knowledge as concrete, discreet objects, and places these ‘objects’ of knowledge outside in the world and in social space. The vision metaphor therefore necessarily entails a particular use of spatial metaphors. Entailments of this ‘knowledge as objects in space’ metaphor include such terms as ‘clear’ and ‘lucid’ when expressing the obviousness of the knowledge; the implication is that the metaphorical space between ourself and the knowledge object is transparent. Also, we tend to use terms associated with light, such as ‘illuminated’, ‘enlightened’ etc. to indicate the acquisition of this sort of knowledge, as if the space around us had suddenly become brightly lit, revealing objects of knowledge that were previously hidden from us in the darkness.

Posted in Knowledge, Language, Light, Seeing, Space, Transparent | No Comments »

Seeing Elephants: Visual Knowledge

October 8th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The language that we use to articulate different ways of knowing, and to talk about different types of knowledge, varies according to those ways and types. Our way of speaking about ‘emotional’ content is very dissimilar to our way of speaking about ideas we consider to be ‘rational’. One of the key ways in which the difference is revealed is in the use of terms which refer to the various sensory modes through which we access the world. When we talk about things ‘objectively’, trying to discuss topics rationally, (or at least when we want to appear as if that is what we are doing), we use the language of sight and vision. We ask ‘Do you see?’ when we mean ‘Do you think?”. This use of visual metaphor to organise our relationship to ideas treats those ideas as if they were solid objects somehow located outside of ourselves. This objectification of ideas and their putative location in the shared space beyond ourselves not only figuratively distances them, but also locates them in an imaginary shared space of intersubjective knowledge and experience. By locating my idea ‘out there’ in the world through the use of visual metaphor I am trying to give it the status of a physical fact, as solid and undeniable as an elephant.

Posted in Elephant, Knowledge, Language, Object, Objectivity, Seeing | No Comments »

Zero Person Singular

October 10th, 2006 Fred McVittie

First and third person accounts are the dominant positions of phenomenological and physical enquiry; phenomenology uses the 1st person ‘I’, objective science uses the 3rd person ‘he’, ’she’, or ‘it’. Science usually uses the passive mode, such as when we say that ‘this measurement was made’, or ‘this experiment was carried out’, the 3rd person making the measurement or carrying out the experiment is implied rather than overtly stated or named.

An ongoing problem in areas of study which draw on the techniques of both phenomenological and physical enquiry, consciousness research for example, is resolving these 1st and 3rd person accounts into one single coherent account, taken from a single viewpoint. To rational science the 1st person is invalid, to phenomenology the 3rd person is irrelevant.

A possible means for establishing a hiatus in this problem is by developing a mode of discourse which is neither 1st nor 3rd person, and one possible candidate for such a discourse would be an enhanced version of the way of speaking known as e-prime, which draws on Korzybski’s General Semantics. In standard e-prime the verb ‘to be’ is suppressed, such that any statement which claims an objective physical fact by saying that some object is some property (such as ‘that elephant is grey), is disallowed, and must be re-articulated to include the viewing position (so that the sentence above becomes ‘that elephant appears grey to me’, or more pedantically ‘the side of the elephant facing me appears grey to me’). Clearly, standard e-prime favours a 1st person account, countering the implied 3rd person objectivity of the is statement. An enhanced version of e-prime would also eliminate this 1st person in favour of a zero person singular account, in which no reference is made, overtly or covertly, to any viewer whatever.

Posted in Elephant, Korzybski, Alfred, Language, Objectivity, Phenomenology, Science | No Comments »

Mentalese and Dualism

May 22nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

We have grown accustomed to the idea that actions and our thoughts take place in two radically separate worlds, and that the languages of these worlds is also radically separate. This idea finds its purest expression in the physical dualism of the hardware/software binary of computation. Standard (digital) computation involves both the analog, literal, concrete artifacts of input/output devices, (and the world which the devices connect to), as well as the abstract symbol systems which represent and process the data acquired by the input/output devices. The ‘language’ of I/O is one of spaces and surfaces, of movement and duration, of force, texture and distance. An I/O device is required to interact with the environment and is therefore bound to speak the language of the physics of that environment. The symbolic language spoken by the CPU on the other hand, ultimately a language with the limited but powerful vocabulary of only 0 and 1, has its own grammar and syntax unconnected to the physics of objects and spaces. CPU languages, from LISP to VB and C++, are self-contained symbolic systems and their primary importance is their ability to generate results. The actual working of these languages or codes is irrelevant.

This idea of two radically separate languages, one internal and one external, produces odd results when applied to the human body and mind. It would result in an assumption that the mind, like the CPU of a computer, used a discreet and hermetic symbolic system to process the data provided by by the I/O devices of the senses. Further, that the actual processes of that internal language, call it ‘Mentalese’, is irrelevant provided that the results are appropriate. In other words, computation metaphors of mind reinforce the idea that the language of the body is different to the language of the mind, and contributes towards dualist understandings of mind and body.

Posted in Cognition, Computation, Language | No Comments »

Empty the World into Yourself

July 3rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The work of Korzybski on General Semantics is one source for the linguistic/psychological exercise referred to as ‘e-prime’. In e-prime one adopts a way of speaking in which the verb ‘to be’ is consciously suppressed, forcing one to use circumlocutions in order to express ideas and share observations which would otherwise use that verb. From personal experience, I can say that the long term adopting of this way of speaking does undoubtedly have an effect on thought and ultimately on worldview.

A possible interpretation of the reasons for the effectiveness of this strategy in offering alternative ways of being is that it contributes toward a breakdown of the habitual dualism which characterises modern thought and individual philosophy. Our routine existence is dominated by a sense, largely unspoken, that experience is divided into two parts, the object of that experience, which is detached, external and ‘over there’, and the subject of that experience,which is personal, hidden, and ‘inside’. This duality is often spoken of in terms of ’self’ and ‘other’, and is probably formed at a very early age. As Paul Bloom notes in ‘Descartes Baby’, we may all be ‘natural born dualists‘.

An aspect of the natural dualism which is so familiar to us is that, both conceptually and linguistically, we talk about the world in two different ways, one which is grounded in objective properties, and one which is grounded in subjective perceptions. When we are striving for a sense of objectivity we talk about the objects of the world in terms of the properties they possess independent of our perceptions. So for example we might say that the leaves of this tree are green, suggesting that there are some objects in the world, call them leaves, existing independently of ourselves, and these objects possess a property which we can identify as greenness. Alternatively, if we are not trying to achieve this objectivity we might say instead that the leaves on the tree appear green to me. This subtle difference relocates the property of greenness back where it belongs, inside the body of the perceiver. This relocation has been effected by the suppression of the verb ‘to be’ which is present in the first sentence but absent in the second. Being is transformed in ’seeming’.

The wholesale use of this technique eventually deprivileges the conceptual framework supporting dualism in favour of a monist understanding in which all experience, ‘external’ and ‘internal’, ‘over there’ and ‘in here’, is suffused with a single sense of active awareness.

This sense of awareness grounded in perception rather than in a putative set of objective properties also has implications for the self-perception of conscious awareness. When applied to an understanding of self one is obliged to interpret self-awareness not as an experience of human being but of human seeming.

Posted in Bloom, Paul, Dualism, Exercises, Korzybski, Alfred, Language | No Comments »

Untheism

August 18th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Untheism is a school of though which denies not only the existence of the divine being usually referred to as ‘god’, but also the existence of any phenomena, entity, or material which can be referred to using the definite article word ‘the’. Also, (although perhaps less stridently,) we untheists deny the validity of the indefinite article ‘a’ (or ‘an’). In this spirit, for the remainder of this writing the words ‘the’, ‘a’, and ‘an’, will be put ‘under erasure’ as Derrida might say, as indicated by a strike through. These words will be present, but in reading them you are to remember that they are there as a gesture of courtesy to the habits of reading and have no semantic value.

The term ‘the’ indicates an artificial stasis in the flux of existence, a petrification of the otherwise dynamic flow of creation. This denial of the noun as captured and ossified in direct and indirect articles applies to all entities, but Untheism has a particular position with regard to the fictional construct referred to as ‘the mind’. This concept, which has no real validity in any truly representative discourse, is a product of the human tendency to fix everything into a noun form and thus gain a sense of control over it. This concept of ‘the mind’ is discussed and analysed in various ways according to the particular discipline in which the discussion takes place. What is rarely if ever stated is the simple reality that ‘the mind’ is what the brain does. ‘Mind’ is not a noun it is a verb, or more accurately it is a number of verbs: remembering, perceiving, imagining etc. To give this verb ‘mind’ the status of a noun and thus pronounce it to be a ‘thing’ is the equivalent of watching an apple fall from a tree and saying that there are two entities involved, the apple and this other mysterious thing called ‘the falling’. This would be patently ludicrous, in that situation ‘falling’ is what an apple does and it makes no sense to regard it as a separate entity.

This analogy of mind(ing) with falling is further revealing if we remember that older theories of why objects fell to the earth did indeed posit the existence of a mysterious entity-like force or substance. This ’substance’ sometimes called ‘entelechy’ was considered to be somehow inside of the object and provided the motivation or intention for the object to return to its natural place, usually the ground. An interesting variant on this downwardly directed entelechy was that possessed by birds which, since their natural place was in the air not on the ground, tended to move upwards when released not downward. This upward moving entelechy whas supposedly also contained within smoke and flame. We may sneer at this obvious superstition but it is worth remembering that the idea of ‘weight’ which use routinely in our daily lives is as fictional a property as the entelechy of Medieval alchemists. When we talk about the weight of an object we are imagining that the object possesses this property of weight in largely the same way that it might possess size or shape. However, we can disabuse ourselves of that notion simply by taking the object into space when we see that, although the shape and size are conserved, this mythical weight has completely disappeared. So in talking about weight we are effectively repeating old ideas about entelechy; we are inventing a term, a noun, to indicate what is actually a verb. Weight is not a thing and we have no business putting direct or indirect articles in front of it. Weight is what, under the right conditions, an object does.

Similarly, under the right conditions, this concept of ‘mind’ is what the brain does, and to give it the ontology of an object is to misidentify it.

Posted in God, Language | No Comments »

Language Space

August 20th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Newtonian space is conceived as infinite, still, unmoving, and constant; an arena within which the events of the universe take place but which is unaffected by those events. It is the experience of Earth-bound room-inhabiting mammals applied to the cosmos. As I lift this coffee cup to my lips the space between cup and hand and mouth remains neutral; there is no sense that it bends and shapes itself to accomodate or promote that activity, any more than the screen on which these words are being typed is bending to allow their deposition. Having said that, maybe the onscreen real estate is undergoing some kind of transformation that the void that includes myself and my coffee is not. Looking back (up) at the words and sentences which precede this one I have to admit that the space that they occupy is meaningful in a way that the space below, invisibly white, is not. And it is not simply (?) because the words are meaningful, but rather that a space of meaning has come into being through its articulation. Each small cluster of black marks on the screen is separated from every other but there is an order and a poignancy to their separation. The law of white spaces prises apart one meaning from another and places them here and there as motes of language floating in the air, but this ‘hereness’, this ‘thereness’, the air between, is a product of the prizing, and is rife with the tension of the act. The smoothness of the space below is not gradually acquiring the stratiation of the space above but otherwise staying the same, it is more that space is gradually appearing as the word-objects appear; there is no organisation of pre-existing space (the space of meaning) but the creation of that space. Each word has an attractive power which draws the eye away from the interstitial spaces, but with a little effort it is possible to note the presence, the flow of this elemental whiteness between the shadows of the language, and all the time we attend to this background we feel the tug of the words. It is hard to resist and we might find ourselves reading a word or two here and there. Our name appears in print and we gravitate toward it, our eyes falling through the white space toward the darkness of the name. Gravity is suicide and the meaningful space which language has created is also responsible for the dark force inherent in the mark.

Posted in Language, Space | No Comments »

Language and Objects - Location of Consciousness

September 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Even though a concept like consciousness has no location or extension in space (as Descartes famously noted) we nevertheless feel an almost irresistable urge to provide it with one. Just as the description of a solid object feels incomplete without a location for that object, and just as part of the ontology of a person’s body is whereabouts that body happens to be standing (hence the ASL convention in online communication), so the description of an abstract entity feels similarly incomplete until we can conceive of a location for it. This tendency to locate abstract entities in space usually happens non-consciously, but the fact that it is taking place is revealed in our language and gesture.

In filling in the location attribute for the particular ‘-ness’ of consciousness we adopt a number of strategies. We might point to the skull of people around us and say, perhaps a little unconvincingly, that it is in those bone boxes: unconvincing because we can never really know and have no sensory evidence that it exists in those places. Alternatively we might point to our own meat head, which feels more intuitively valid since there does seem to be a kind of ‘feeling of being’ at the end of our pointing finger. However, this can feel unsatisying in another way since we cannot help but notice that everyone around is pointing to totally different places, their own heads, and since they are clearly wrong, then maybe I am similarly deluded. If we are spiritually inclined, or if we are familiar with the reflexive monism of Max Velmans for example, we might make vague, hand-waving gestures in the air around us and make noise about consciousness ‘emerging’ in the interplay between subject and object, as if consciousness were a kind of invisible gas leaking from our sense organs and permeating the space around us. The really ambitious amongst us might even throw open their arms to their fullest extent, claiming that consciousness is everywhere and in everything within and without that embrace.

Usually we adopt a mixed strategy for the location of the weird ‘-ness’ of aware being, expanding and contracting it pretty much at will and as circumstances dictate. Sometimes it is contained within as the ‘I’ inside, and sometimes it is shared among family and friends as the royal ‘we’ of our interpersonal kingdom. Sometimes it is all there is. And at this ultimate point of extension, where, as Pascal said, the location of the centre is everywhere and periphery is nowhere, I personally would not be speaking of I personally at all. Here is the ground. Here is being.

Posted in Consciousness, Descartes, Rene, Language, Object, Velmans, Max | No Comments »

Effect of Words on Perception

September 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The words that we speak seem to have a concrete effect on perception. Whilst the claims of Whorf and Sapir are fairly well disproved, it is evident that there is a relationship between language and thought, and that one’s perceptions can be affected by the language that we use. Lera Brodowsky at Stanford University found that Russian speakers were better able to distinguish between various shades of blue, a phenomenon which she attributed to the fact that the Russian language has a clear distinction between light and dark blue which is not emphasised in English. The distinction in the language allowed the Russian speakers to create different categories of colour which the English speakers had not, conceptualising all blues as belonging to the same broad category. This difference is categorisation, supported by difference is language use, produced a difference in perceptual acuity. It is important to note, in contrast to the Sapir-Whorf model, the English speakers were just as able to identify the distinction in the various shades of blue, the difference lay in the speed with which they were able to carry out this distinction. There was was no fundamental difference in the ability to see the colours, only in the difference to swiftly respond to small distinctions in those colours.

Posted in Brodowsky, Lera, Language, Perception, Whorf, Benjamin | No Comments »

Language and Objects

September 17th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Or ability to give names to the objects, events, actions, and properties of the world may have had some odd and unpredictable effects on the development of consciousness. It seems likely that, in the historical narrative of language development, the first fully established and culturally shared language elements or words were those for concrete objects and entities: man, tree, mountain. And even is this word/object connection was not primary in the development of the species, it is certainly our first introduction to formal language acquisition as children. Our story books and primers and full of brightly coloured pictures of apples and zebras with the corresponding label firmly attached alongside. This building of language on a foundation consisting of the naming of things has the inevitable effect of forming a very close association between the ontology of words and the ontology of things. Words, and more critically the concepts which those words exemplify, only feel ‘real’ when they have the properties of identifiable objects.

One significant property that is possessed by all objects is that they each have a location in space. Every entity we give the word ‘tree’ to is found at a particular location; ‘There is a tree’ we might say, indicating that location. The attachment of words to things means that when we point to these things we seem also to be pointing to the place where the word and the concept is. We know intellectually (even if we are wrong) that the conceptualisation is taking place in our brain, but it feels like the tree, and the concept of the tree, are over there.

This also applies (although perhaps less so) to actions and attributes: concepts which are realised linguistically not as nouns but as verbs and adjectives. We can easily point to (something) red or (someone) running and the end point of this pointing is a particular location in space. Again, we do not feel that the object and the concept are separate, the action or attribute somehow out there while the concept is ‘in here’. We experience both concept and ‘object’ simultaneously and holistically as existing at that location.

There are some concepts however which do not, and possibly cannot, be easily conceived of as occupying a particular spatial location. Many of the concepts we have words for simply cannot be pointed at (or more accurately, cannot be pointed at easily. I may argue that we often modify our concepts to allow some form of pointing to be possible). Such unlocatables include emotions (which we might try to locate in the body, but are never entirely satisfied when X marks that particular spot), interpersonal, political, and institutional structures such as ‘the law’, ‘art’, and ‘nationality’, and pretty much any word/concept ending in ‘-ness’: happiness, consciousness, etc. Obviously these ideas, whilst they may be attributed to particular classes of entity or behaviour, do not have concrete referents and cannot be pointed at. We might point at a person who seems to exhibiting consciousness, or at a painting on the wall of a gallery, or at a policeman that we know is involved is somehow ‘upholding the law’, or at a nationalist symbol such as a flag, but we cannot point to the thing itself. Moreover, when we point at these things, we do not feel entirely sure that we have identified the place where the concept is really happening. ‘The Law’ is not part of the adjectival property of a policeman in the way that ‘red’ is a property of a pillar box, ‘art’ seems to be somehow larger or more variable than its single instantiation may suggest, and the design of flags may change without that affecting the concept. When we try to point to such concepts we feel as if we are constantly missing, when we point we miss the point one might say.

Regardless of the inherent impossibility of attributing such abstract concepts with a specific location in space, the unconscious tendency we have to attempt such attribution, a tendency built on the foundations of an early association of concepts with concrete objects, means that we nevertheless often make the attempt. A concept without a location is felt as less real than one with such a location. Abstract concepts have no location in space. To make our abstract concepts seem real we give them a location artificially. Intuitively real concepts involve the marriage of the conceptual and the perceptual, and sometimes, in order to keep it real, such marriages are not made in the Heaven of material objects but are arranged on the Earth of abstract ideas.

Posted in Abstract, Language, Object, Space | No Comments »

The Royal We

October 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

An artifact of language that prevents us from feeling a unity larger than with the body we inhabit is the extended use we make of personal pronouns. Whenever we read a story, an item in the newspaper, or article on a website, we find the singularity of a unified viewpoint shattered into the ‘he said, she said’ of multiplicity. Imagine if every time we spoke for ourselves we spoke from a different part of our body, so that instead of the ‘I did this’ and ‘I think that’ of normal individual speech we said things like ‘arm did this’ and ‘neck thinks that’. Anyone listening to this kind of talk would quite rightly assume we were insane, or at the very least incoherent. When we speak as our individuated, ego-centric, body-bound selves we speak for and identify with the collective of our body parts and with all the vastly different mood states, beliefs, ideas, ideologies and histories in which we participate. This is so natural to us that we barely notice we are doing it. Even though our bodies and minds are disparate and sovereign to themselves we seem to have no difficulty in embracing them in a conceptual unity, a personal non-duality if you like, and referring to this chaotic gabbling horde as ‘I’.

When we turn our attention outward however, and try to see a larger unity, ideally identifying with that unity in some kind of enlightened state, then we keep coming across this basic duality of self and other. ‘Here I am’, our minds seem to be saying, ‘and there is everything else’. Even more, we break the ‘everything else’ into a ‘he’ over there, a ’she’ over there, and a whole flotilla of ‘its’ scattered across the landscape. Each of these diverse and diverting entities seems totally separate and alone, and any communion between them takes the form of a shouting across the gulf which separates them: semaphore and smoke signals lost in translation. Worse still, each of these islands seems to have its own currency and its own property rights; alongside me, and you, and him, and her, and it, there is a mine, and yours, and his, and hers, and its. The wealth of the world has been carved up and thrown to the dogs and suddenly no-one seems to have enough, and no-one is to blame because no-one is all there is. In place of no-one we should have no-many, and we cannot recognise no-many if we insist on ignoring the singular existence of One and getting the name wrong all the time.

A significant contribution to this breaking of self and world must be the habitual tendency we have to assign different speaking positions to the various parts of this large unity, making a kitchen sink drama out of a divine monologue. Try this simple exercise to hear the voice of the no-many, the One.

  • Take a newspaper article or passage in a book
  • Cross out all of the following words: I, you, he, she, it, they, and replace them with ‘we’
  • Cross out all these words: mine, yours, hers, his, its, theirs, and replace them with ‘ours’.
  • Read it again and hear how all the parts of the divine body have congregated into a unity.

You (we) are speaking and listening for everyone and everything in creation.

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We Are All Scientists

October 23rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

T.H. Huxley, (Darwin’s Bulldog), in an article published in 1863, famously claimed that ‘We are all Scientists’ (1). In it he points out that the normal rational thinking which we use all the time is very similar to the organised processes of rational thought that we associate with professional scientists. In other words, that there is a case to be made that being a scientist is not a job description reserved for those with PhDs, but is anyone who uses rational deduction to make decisions. In a sense the term scientist is a much better description for a person who values modern, humanist, conscious thought over metaphysics or religion than the current term ‘atheist’ which only serves to describe what such persons do not believe. This latter strategy, definition of ‘atheists’ by negative attribute, is the equivalent of replying to the question ‘do you have any hobbies’ with ‘I am a non-stamp collector’. In other words, whilst true, it is almost completely valueless.

1. available at http://www.is.wayne.edu/mnissani/a&s/allsci.htm.

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Barthes on Trees

October 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

If I am a woodcutter and I am led to name the tree I am felling, whatever the form of my sentence, I ’speak the tree’, I do not speak about it. This means that my language is operational, transitively linked to its object; between the tree and myself, there is nothing but my labour, that is to say an action. This is political language: it represents nature for me only inasmuch as I am going to transform it, it is a language thanks to which I ‘act the object’; the tree is not an image for me, it is simply the meaning of my action. But if I am not a woodcutter, I can no longer ’speak the tree’, I can only speak about it, on it…. I no longer have anything but an intransitive relationship with the tree; this tree is no longer the meaning of reality as a human action, it is an image-at-one’s-disposal.. (Barthes 1973, p.145-46).

(This) acceptance of the risk inherent in positive interpretation is all the more remarkable because Barthes, whose sense of historicity and negativity is equal to Sartre’s or Brecht’s, usually cannot help giving expression to a fundamental hope, whose strength can be deduced negatively from the constant emphasis on language in his work, be it the ‘language’ of poetics, the language in which the critic writes his interpretation, or the final act of writing which for him is the natural conclusion of the reading intimacy (p.94). This is the hope of doing without language altogether, without representation or mediation of any kind. In Mythologies, the intellectual who can only ‘speak about a tree’ is seen to envy the woodcutter who, according to Barthes, ‘speaks the tree’ – uses the immediate language of action (pp. 145, 156, 158).
(Nisbet: 1989. p. 139)

Nisbet, Hugh Barr. The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism. Cambridge University Press. 1989.

Barthes, R. (1973). Myth today In: Barthes, R. Mythologies. London: Collins/ Paladin. Original publication, in French, 1957.

Posted in Barthes, Roland, Language, Tree, Writing | No Comments »

Free Floating Metaphors

October 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

It has been conclusively demonstrated that much of the language that we speak is metaphorical, these metaphors not only being linguistic turns of phrase but echoing the widespread use of such metaphors as a cognitive strategy allowing us to think the otherwise unthinkable. A tenet within the various disciplines of conceptual metaphor theory, embodied cognition, cognitive linguistics and experiential philosophy is that the mind can only think in terms of the affordances of a (evolutionarily constructed) body and sensorimotor system. Cognition uses the totally familiar and concrete experiences of pulling, pushing, containment, direction, substances, entities, directions etc as the basic vocabulary from which all thoughts, however apparently abstract, are contructed. The use of conceptual metaphor within cognition allows us to conceive of entities and phenomena which would otherwise be inconceivable, these entities being outside the range of the senses.

Most of the work in this area has been concerned with the excavation of such metaphors and the mapping of key metaphor groups across specific areas of experience. What has not been systematically identified and analysed is the wide range of metaphors in common daily use which refer to entities which are not only abstract but which are, in all likelihood, non-existent. We may be familiar with (and perhaps condescending toward) the use of such fictions in the past, totally unaware that we are maintaining similar fictions in the present through the repeated positing of such ideas in language and thought.

Some entities which figure extensively in our language and cognition seem to exist purely in metaphorical form; they have well-articulated sources for the metaphorical mapping but no evidence exists at all for the target of such mapping. These are concepts without referents: free-floating figures of speech and thought that occupy our minds and feature extensively in social discourse. Their only life is in language and mentation and perhaps the most two prevalent of these are the concept of mind and the concept of God.

Posted in Cognitive Linguistics, Embodiment, God, Imagination, Language, Metaphor | No Comments »

Suppression of the senses (including language)

October 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

A significant part of conscious experience is provided by the senses, and much of the day to day work of the mind is concerned with the processing of the various impacts that are being made on our senses as we engage with the world around us. Consciousness can, or course, still operate when sensory awareness is lessened or removed, as for example, when we daydream. Total removal of all sensory input for protracted periods of time, a procedure referred to as sensory deprivation, forces consciousness to be constituted and structured solely from internal sources, and without ongoing continuous contact with the body’s sensorimotor system. Without the carrier frequency of bodily awareness, consciousness in S.D. Sometimes goes into free fall and can be psychically damaging. Limited forms of sensory removal however, have interesting and safe effects on consciousness, allowing for different forms of being to arise and potentially transform or otherwise positively affect the experiencer.

1.Visual Suppression – It is an often-quoted cliché that those who are unfortunately blind from birth develop ‘compensatory’ acuity in the other senses, a particularly discriminating sense of hearing for example. This effect, whilst not mitigating the inconvenience of blindness, is suggestive of a modification in consciousness. The ontology of hearing is not like that of sight, and a more discriminatory hearing sense is not an inferior replacement for seeing. A world which is predominantly auditory is significantly different from one which is mainly visual, and this difference, experienced as a shift in conscious awareness, is hinted at through the simple act of closing the eyes and keeping them closed.

2.Proprioceptive Suppression – Occasionally referred to as a ‘6th sense’, proprioception gives us information about the location of our body in space, the relationship between its parts, and information about motion, balance, stress etc. Partial suppression this channel of experience is as simple as sitting perfectly still in a comfortable, unstressed position. The effect of this simple technique are well known and are probably best described in the practices of ashkantaza, a zen mediation technique in which ’sitting zen’ with a stilled body results in a similar stillness of mind and a highly altered state of consciousness.

3.Suppression of Speech – Speech is not usually considered a sensory mode, however, it may be worth reflecting on this possibility for a moment. Although we tend to regard the senses as passive portals to the world, imagining that when we open our eyes and ears the world simply pours in, it has been shown conclusively that sensation is much more active and participatory than this. When we look out into the world we effectively probe for significance and stimulus, ignoring sights and sounds we judge to be irrelevant. Medieval philosophers regarded vision as a product of ’seeing rays’ which were emitted by the seer, rather like a spotlight, and whilst we now know that such rays are not actual, the spirit of these imaginary beams emitted by the eyes and contacting the material of the world is accurate. Seeing, like all of the senses, is active and participatory and ‘probing’. With this in mind, it may be useful to consider language use, speaking, as a type of sense. Using language we probe the world around us, asking questions, participating in conversations which elicit responses. Changes to the use of this language sense undoubtedly have a significant effect on consciousness. The total suppression of active language through simply declining so speak has a long tradition in religious and philosophical orders who use ‘vows of silence’ as part of their practice.

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Knowledge and Knowing

March 16th, 2008 Fred McVittie

When we want to introduce or discuss some item of knowledge; a perception, theory, or some expression of personal experience or belief, we use either this word ‘knowledge’, or we use the verb form ‘knowing’. This difference is significant and draws attention to different aspect of the overall metaphorical schema that structures our understanding.

As noted elsewhere, the organisational logic for our understanding of different forms of knowledge is drawn from our embodied experience as spatially-located entities, and the differences in knowledge types is mapped from the differences in spatial and sensory awareness produced by that embodiment. The use of these terms ‘knowledge’ and ‘knowing’ can be identified with reference to this organisational schema.

When we use the word ‘knowledge’ we are implicitly conferring upon the ‘object’ of knowledge some of the properties associated with objects in the physical world of our embodiment. Objects tend to be clearly bounded, be (visually) available to more than one individual at once, to persist over time and, crucially, to continue to exist in our absence. This last property is particularly interesting as the notion that objects exist even when we are not looking at them, an apparently trivial observation, is problematic when applied metaphorically to knowledge. It is clear that the tree that I look at (and photograph) each day when I walk my dogs does not disappear when I walk past it, (at least to the extent that it continues to be visible from the satellites accessed by Google Earth), however my active knowledge of the tree, as present in my visual perception of it, undoubtedly does. As the physicist Percy Bridgman, put it:

Since an object never occurs naked but always in conjunction with an instrument of measurement or the means whereby we obtain knowledge of it, the concept of ‘object’ as something in and of itself, is an illegitimate one.

This is also a question which exercised Albert Einstein, particularly in relation to status of the moon as ontological/epistemological object of realist knowledge. For a good discussion of this see http://www.eequalsmcsquared.auckland.ac.nz/sites/emc2/tl/philosophy/moon.cfm

This use of the term ‘knowledge’ places our attention on the apparently naked object, and distracts us from the presence of the instument of our own processes of knowledge production. The body is rendered absent and ecstatic in this flight away from the source of such ‘measurement’ toward its destination in the perceived/conceived, and theoretically ‘possessed’ object.

The term ‘knowing’ has a very different function within the overall schema, and it is revealing that certain writers, Mark Johnson for example, make explicit and insistant use of ‘knowing’ as a preferential term. Knowing, as a verb, demands the acknowledgement of a subject engaged in the act indicated; there is no escape or flight from the body of the knower as seems to be implied by ‘knowledge’. In using the term ‘knowing’ the focus is shifted away from the destination of the knowledge production process and widened to include something of the source and the path. There is also a sense, in this use of the verb, that the object of such knowing is not complete and permanent, existing like a rock on the riverbed, but rather is open to the pressings of engagement. There is something of the disposition of the knower present in this knowing, what Perkins might refer to as the dispositional quality of ‘pro-active’ knowledge, and also, critically, the hands-on immediacy of the performative.

Posted in Cognition, Embodiment, Knowledge, Language, Metaphor, Objectivity, Performance, Subjective | No Comments »

A Tongue Returning to a Broken Tooth

April 2nd, 2008 Fred McVittie

(Transcribed from HERE)

In some of these videos and in some of the bits of writing in the blog which kind of parallels these videos I keep finding myself coming back to the same ideas over and over again. Sometimes within the space of a few days but sometimes over a period of weeks or even months I find myself coming back to something. and looking back over the writing of the blog particularly it’s very evident that some of the ideas that I’ve been struggling with in the early pieces of writing, or that I’ve had a very, sort of, fleeting relationship with have come back in much more solid form, or much more fully expressed form. When I think about that part of me thinks that it is like a tongue going back to a broken tooth, that’s one of the images that I have of what’s happening there. A kind of fascination with ……….. a necessity to lick it into shape or explore it internally to have a really close examination of it, but not an examination, it’s paradoxical that the blog is public and the examination seems to be taking place much more privately where the tongue explores rather than where a more distanced type of exploration might take place. I’m just wondering what happens when I do change those (entries), when those postings or these videos change over time there is, I do return to something in a different form, they change, what is happening there? I think part of what’s happening is there’s a kind of physical shaping, the hands of my thinking are going out there and ‘tweaking’ stuff, nailing bits together and cutting off the bits that are unnecessary, twisting it back, shaping it, and in some cases eventually launching it almost like a shipbuilding exercise. Certainly some of the early ideas to do with, for example, liquidity metaphors, which fascinate me,eventually are processesed and nailed together, shaped and ultimately launched as a kind of object, a kind of ship, and that’s now available as a published paper, academic paper, so it’s a kind of objective (not flotsam or jetsam) a kind of objective …. stuff, piece of objective… vessel or vehicle of some sort which is off there floating toward the horizon all by itself now, out of my control. So it’s shaped with my hands, the hands of my conceptualisation, and ultimatetely launched. So part of this process seems to be about that, seems to be about revisiting, for the purposes of shaping and finishing and ultimately launching, but part of it also seems to be about this broken tooth idea which is more to do with an internal caressing of the broken, almost a tasting of the broken (and here I’m reminded of the tongue’s other use in shaping the sounds of words)a kind of semiotic engagement with the broken, a linguistic, pre-linguistic engagement with broken ideas. keep returning to that broken idea to try to wrap a word around it. That seems to be what’s going on, at least partially what’s going on when I’m finding myself returning to these same ideas; recycling, repurposing, and rebuilding. Licking and tasting and launching.

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Family of Writing

April 7th, 2008 Fred McVittie

In this writing I make reference to a range of expressions from different areas of knowledge; art, philosophy, the physical and cognitive sciences, poetry, and it is important that the status of these digressions is clear. The thesis being propounded is that, undergirding all or these expressions or discourses, what Wittgenstein might call ‘language games’, is a relatively small number of key metaphors and schematic images, and it is these metaphors which organise the expressions into a coherent whole. I will also be arguing that even though the wholeness of this panoply of discourses is not readily apparent it is this cohesion which allows us to use and evaluate these knowledge forms differently and appropriately.

Posted in Language, Metaphor, Wittgenstein, Ludwig, thesis | No Comments »

Clean Language and Purple Prose

April 9th, 2008 Fred McVittie

It is here that lucidity is at stake. Lucidity is precisely that which sets itself against this fixing of reality, this materialisation of truth, no matter what form it takes. In itself, it is nothing, and the only way of speaking of it would be that of negative theology, in the sense that it is not. It is neither a contract with reality nor with knowledge. It is a pact and, if it has anything to do with light, literally speaking, it is not with Enlightenment reason and objective knowledge. It would lie, to evoke a very beautiful image, at the intersection of the light issuing from the object and the light coming from the gaze. Or rather it would consist, as Musil says, in looking at the world with the eyes of the world – and not, as he says, in having the world at the distant end of the gaze [au fond du regard], because it would then crumble into absurd details, as sadly separated from each other as the stars at night… (Baudrillard, J. 2007)

It seems quite possible that there is a relationship between certain communication styles and our intentions with regard to the information we are trying to communicate. When we are striving for the creation of knowledge which we would like be considered as objective, that is, knowledge which, in metaphorical terms, has some of the features of an object, then we use a particular set of techniques, and these differ from the techniques we use when we are not seeking to create such a knowledge object. Furthermore, the kind of metalanguage we use when we talk about such styles is itself a contributor to the overall schema of knowledge within which the sense of our communication is formed.

In order to explicate this it is perhaps useful to remind ourselves what might be thought of as the prototypical, and possibly paradigmatic example of objectivity. As I have noted elsewhere in this writing, one of the key metaphors through which knowing is understood is through the association of KNOWING with SEEING. This metaphorical relationship is part of a larger set of body-based metaphors which map different types of knowing with different modes of sensory access; touch, smell, hearing, taste, etc. The KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor is particular relevant because it is through the entailments of this metaphor that many aspects of the structure of knowledge are articulated. As we will see, some of these entailments support the concept of ‘objective’ or ‘object-like’ knowledge, and allied to this, other entailments narrate the relationship between the subject (the receiver of the communication) and this knowledge object. It is these latter entailments which shape the metalanguage in which we talk about different communication styles.

To bring out the various entailments mentioned above we might remind ourselves of what the circumstances and conditions are in which SEEING takes place, for it is these circumstances and conditions which are carried over into the metaphor and which give structure to the otherwise abstract concept of KNOWING. For the sake of this example I am here listing the ideal conditions for seeing; the conditions under which, in the embodied physical world, we would best observe the objects around us in their most sovereign state.

Obviously, for seeing to take place there must be a space for the ’seer’ and the ’seen’ to occupy. Also, this space in which both seer and seen are present must be brightly lit. The space between the seer and the seen must be empty and without obstruction, and should also be neither so great that the object disappears into the distance (or over the horizon), nor so near that it cannot be focused upon, or presses against the body in an uncomfortable way. There should be no disturbance in the air between seer and seen, and that air should be free from vapours, fogs, shadows, distracting aerial effects, or in fact anything which might draw the attention of the eye away from the seen object. The air should be colourless, still, and to all intents and purposes, absent; it should approximate the condition of pure space, a perfect conduit for the gaze. These are the conditions one would wish to find at the summit of a mountain, and which might cause one to say “I can see our house from here”. This is the state of interstellar space, where the blackness of the sky is testament to its ability to allow the unimpeded transmission of the light. Crystaline moons with unambiguous, razor-sharp edges. Under such conditions objects achieve their greatest clarity and the features which define them as objects become most available.

If these are the conditions under which our sense of sight produces the most perfect representation of distant objects, clearly outlined and uniquely visible, then it should be the case that these same conditions are taken over as entailments when we wish to produce similarly perfect representations of metaphorical objects. When we want to convey the impression that our knowledge is objective we should find ourselves aspiring to such conditions within our language. We should also find ourselves making overt reference to these conditions when we describe our linguistic aspirations. So, for example, we might try to make our communication ‘clear’ or ‘lucid’, and also be able to say that that is what we are attempting. We might want to make our points (the directions in which we are pointing) as obvious and direct as possible. We would certainly avoid filling the vacuum of this space with conceptual fogs, or put up any obstacles to understanding. We like the space of objectivity to be colourless, so we would avoid purple prose, or the occluding shadows of the occult. Again, it is likely that we would be completely overt in our stating of these aspirations and take pride in our desire to avoid obscurantism through such ‘plain speaking’. These are the kinds of criteria for objective communication that we would cite in any metalinguistic discourse about how we talk about knowledge. The reason for this is clear (sic); in order to simulate in language the conditions in which objects optimally appear, we have to reproduce these conditions in the form of conceptual metaphors, effectively creating the conditions through which our knowledge can appear lucidly as object. When we say ’speak clearly’ we really mean ’simulate with your speech the emptiness of the space around the moon on a cloudless night in Winter, when the frost has taken all of the moisture from the air.’

Which raises the obvious next question of how such an airless space of language might be produced; what are the mechanisms by which this evacuation of atmosphere and blowing away of conceptual fog might be effected? Although a full retelling of this story of banishment and cleansing is beyond the range of this writing we might look to the recent history of how the word ‘metaphor’ has extended its reach for clues.

As noted elsewhere, until two decades ago the most usual understanding of the relationships between language and the world was one of an unproblematic division between the literal and the metaphorical. (For a good overview of this see Ortony, 1993). Developments in embodied cognition, grounded in evolutionary psychology, have demonstrated that our ability to conceptualise abstract concepts, including the concept of knowledge, is an adaptation of existing cognitive mechanism originally designed for to allow the body to sense and negotiate its environment. As linguistist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker describes it, the structures of cognition which in early humans, as in other animals, originally evolved to deal with the problems of moving through a physical spatial environment; sensing objects and movements, experiencing force and resistance, at some point were copied into other parts of the brain such that they became “scaffolding whose slots are filled with symbols for more abstract concerns like states, possessions, ideas, and desires.” (Pinker 1997, 355). The conclusion of these developments is a new understanding of the key role that metaphor plays in language and cognition. This is summed up by Lakoff and Johnson as follows:

Metaphor is for most people a device of the poetic imagination and the rhetorical flourish–a matter of extraordinary rather than ordinary language. Moreover, metaphor is typically viewed as characteristic of language alone, a matter of words rather than thought or action. For this reason, most people think they can get along perfectly well without metaphor. We have found, on the contrary, that metaphor is pervasive in everyday life, not just in language but in thought and action. Our ordinary conceptual system, in terms of which we both think and act is fundamentally metaphorical in nature…. But our conceptual system is not something we are normally aware of (1981.3).

So is there a mode of communication devoid of such epistemological constructions? Only if we limit ourselves to talking of trees, and rocks, and rivers, which might be a relief; to match our minds one to one with the Newtonian and empirical world in which our bodies are most at home, to follow Thoreau who claimed that “As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler”. However, as inheritors of the cognitive imperative, the restless desire to think not only out of the box but also in ways which are beyond the queerness of any suppositions, this is not really an option. What we are undoubtedly capable of is making extensive use of metaphors, imaginatively constructing elaborate structures of abstract thought without at any point being consciously aware that we are doing so. As Lakoff and Johnson put it:

Our conventional ways of talking about arguments presuppose a metaphor we are hardly ever conscious of. The metaphor is not merely in the words we use–it is in our very concept (1981.6)

One implementation of these ideas can be found in the so-called ‘Symbolic Modelling’ techniques developed by Lawley and Tompkins (2000) which are based on the ‘Clean Language’ work of therapist David Grove, and ultimately originating in the couselling/training practice of Neurolinguistic Programming. An underpinning assumption within this technique, and within NLP more generally, is that non-conscious cognition consists largely of conceptual metaphors, which together make up the internal ‘landscape’ of the client’s mind. Within this model, it is believed that personal development or the alleviation of personal problems, can be affected by more optimal organisation of this landscape, such reorganisation taking the form of a kind of internal imaginary psychogeography. The client is assisted in bringing to consciousness the metaphors they habitually use to frame and structure their experiences, with the assumption that such self knowledge can lead to a more effective inhabiting and management of this interior terrain. The usual communications that take place between client and therapist, as in other forms are communication, are rife with metaphors that both individuals contribute, but in this particular form of therapy such mutual metaphorical exchange would prevent the client from gaining effective knowledge of their own cognitive modelling processes. The desired aim is to surface only those metaphors which arise from the psyche of the client. To ensure that the therapist or counsellor does not ‘contaminate’ the communication by accidentally inserting their own metaphors into the communication Clean Language uses a deliberately restricted syntax which minimises the possibility of this contamination taking place. This syntax consists of a small number of questions and statements that the therapist uses to elicit responses and move the conversation forward. These are:

* And is there anything else about ……?
* And what kind of …… is that ……?
* And where is ……?
* And whereabouts?
* And what happens next?
* And then what happens?
* And what happens just before ……?
* And where does/could …… come from?
* And that’s …… like what?
(Lawley and Tompkins. 2000. 54)

The blanks in the sentences are filled in by playing back parts of the utterances made by the client, such that the original metaphors are largely kept intact. The sentences act as prompts by the therapist which allow the client to carry out further exploration of the internal landscape, moving the cursor backwards and forwards across the map whilst making minimum impact upon that environment themselves.

This interrogative and facilitative style of speech is the only example I have discovered of a linguistic strategy which approximates the literal, and even this assumes the existence of a spatially extended field of thought. Given also that it’s aim is the facilitation of knowledge, it is of no use whatsoever in generating, defining, articulating, constructing, or otherwise imparting knowledge itself. Any communication which has as its aim the transmission of ideas or concepts must inevitably set the terms of that communication through unconscious and covert metaphors. This includes the visual metaphors of clarity, directness, and lucidity which create the cognitive simulation of objectivity.

There are two possible implication for this analysis of the way language supports the construction of knowledge through conceptual metaphor. Firstly, there is the slightly vertiginous loss of certainty which inevitably accompanies the realisation that things were not as they seemed and that the prized goal of objectivity is sometimes made rather than found. This is particularly salient in this case since, not only has everything that was solid melted into air but the air itself has been sucked out along with the space which contained it. (Which irresistably reminds me of the scene in ‘Yellow Submarine’ when the Beatles are sailing through the Sea of Holes and Ringo reaches out and grabs one of these holes, a black circle of empty space, plucking it from its setting and putting it in his pocket. What was left behind after the removal of the hole doesn’t bear thinking about.) Within the overall context of conceptual metaphor theory and embodied cognition however, nothing has really changed. This is not the landscape of endlessly deferred meaning one finds within poststructuralism, nor the ‘nothing to scrute’ of Quine for example (1969, p. 5; cf. p. 27 and 1960, p. 58 and p. 77) who wrote that “The thesis of the inscrutability of reference tells us that it makes no sense to say absolutely, i.e., in any language or framework-independent sense, what objects a speaker is talking about. (According to the Stanford Encyclodpedia of Philosophy at least:an objective text if ever such a thing existed.) Within the terms of embodied cognition, the observation that most language, and indeed most thought, is metaphorical does not banish the world, but rather casts the body and the sense-making processes inherent in the body as the interface between thought and world. Objects remain objects and metaphorical objectivity becomes one of a number of imaginative poetic devices for the comprehension of the otherwise incomprehensible.

The second implication for this embodied view of the relationship between language and knowledge, and how cognition relates to both, is that there may be occasions when the knowledge figuring in the communication is not considered to be an object. If this were the case then setting up linguistic conditions, and by implication cognitive conceptual conditions, which simulate the condition of objectivity may be counter-productive, reminiscent of Polanyi’s example: “Suppose a lecturer points his finger at an object, and tells the audience: ‘Look at this!’ The audience will follow the pointing finger and look at the object” (Polanyi, M. 1969 pp. 181/182). This is all very well if the lecturer wanted the audience to look at the object, (the moon, say), but if the point was not where he was pointing or the aim where it was aimed, this constitutes a misdirection. It may be that a better strategy is to accept the inevitable power of language and the embodied cognition it evidences to constitute not only ontology but also epistemology, (it’s not a bug, it’s a feature). Which is all a roundabout way of saying that the writing I am doing here, and which you are reading, and the conceptual spaces that we share and which which we don’t share, and which for me rotate around the axis of my ‘I’ as for you they rotate around yours, is rarely engaged in the production of objects. Hold a rock in your hand, see a tree on the horizon. And all around is the white space, glowing and vibrant and eyeless.

Baudrillard, J. Hetero de Fe. International Journal of Baudrillard Studies. Volume 4, Number 2 (July, 2007). Translated by Rex Butler and Michael Wallace. ISSN: 1705-6411 http://www.ubishops.ca/BaudrillardStudies/vol4_2/v4-2-baudrillard-hetero-da-fe

Lakoff, G. and M. Johnson (1981). Metaphors we live by. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.

Lawley, J. and P. Tompkins (2000). Metaphors in mind : transformation through symbolic modelling. London, Developing Company Press.

Ortony, Andrew. (1993) Metaphor and Thought. Cambridge University Press

Pinker, S. (1997). How the mind works. New York, Norton.

Polanyi M. Sense-giving and sense-reading. In: Grene M, ed. Knowing and Being, Essays by Michael Polanyi. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1969.

Quine, W.V.O. (1969) Ontological Relativity and Other Essays. NY: Columbia University Press.

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