The Cybernetics of Mind

April 12th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Since I can’t get to all the presentations, I will be posting some of the more interesting (to me) sounding abstracts here verbatim. As follows:

Libet (2004) famously observed that the intention for carrying out an action, contrary to expectation, does not precede the initiation of that action, but actually follows slightly after it.The implication of this is that the conscious ‘willing’ of an action is an illusion and that the conscious mind is, in effect, a witness to the actions of the unconscious to which we attribute the illusion of control.This finding, if correct, has profound consequences on our notion of intention and of the concept of ‘free will’. A significant interpretation of Libet’s results is one in which it is proposed that the conscious mind, the ‘will’ if you like, whilst it may not be the originator of action, nevertheless has the right of veto. In other words, an action initiated by the unconscious, when presented to the conscious mind, may be blocked such that the action is not carried out.

It will be argued here that this identification and selection of action by the conscious mind, which may seem through this description as corresponding to a police action or a restraint, is unlikely to be experienced as such. Provided an appropriate action is initiated swiftly enough that the conscious mind can effectively say ‘yes’ to it (i.e. not exercise its right of veto) it is likely that the selection of right action and the avoidance of error is experienced as simply the flow of everyday life. This proposal will be developed through an extended visual metaphor in which consciousness is represented as the ’steersman’ of the ship of cognition, navigating an oceanic phenomenal universe of experience.

Libet, B. (2004). Mind time: the temporal factor in consciousness. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press.

Posted in Conference Abstract, Consciousness, Free will, Libet, Benjamin, Metaphor, Time | No Comments »

More on Mirror Neurons

April 26th, 2006 Fred McVittie

This abstract was given to me at dinner last night (hand written!) and the presentation is apparently some time today. I will try to get to it and report back.

It has been shown that the areas of the brain which are activated when we carry out an action, say ‘grasping’, are also activated when we imagine the activity. This is sometimes referred to as a ’simulation’. Furthermore, these same areas are activated when we read about or witness someone else carrying out the action of ‘grasping’. This simulation, or mirroring of the action seems to be a key component in understanding the action or the meaning of the word (Feldman & Narayanan 2004), and the process is occasionally referred to as the action of ‘mirror neurons’.

The significance of these findings for metaphor studies is that these same areas of the brain are also activated when we read about or hear an utterance which makes metaphorical use of the term ‘to grasp’, for example; ‘to grasp and idea’; ‘to grasp an opportunity’. This implies that the metaphorical mapping of concrete, body-based concepts onto abstract concepts is not only a function of the minds cognitive processes, but is also taking place at a neural level. The patterns of neuronal firings which occur during metaphor usage are, in effect, the neural correlates of concepts.

The implication of these findings for educators and students will be discussed, particularly in relation to the teaching and learning of abstract or metaphysical concepts.

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

Posted in Conference Abstract, Feldman, J. and Narayanan, S., Grasp, Metaphor, Mirror neurons, Neuroscience, Story | No Comments »

Liquid States of Mind

April 26th, 2006 Fred McVittie

William James (1892) famously uses the term ‘Stream of Consciousness’ to describe the unbroken succession of images which seems to characterize the flowing, river-like experience of wakeful awareness. He also writes of the ‘oceanic’ feelings associated with religious experience (1902), an entailment picked up by Freud (1973) and Clement (1994) and which also figures in first-person accounts of certain varieties of peak experience; a feeling of unbounded unity with the wider cosmos and an apparent dissolution of the boundary between self and world .

These two images, the stream and the ocean, can be seen as complementary features in an ontology, or rather a ‘hydrography’ of consciousness; at one extreme the subject is defined by the path of their individual stream; delineated, bounded, and temporal. At the other extreme the subject dissolves into a larger substrate, an all-encompassing, atemporal ocean. These two terms for particular radically different states of consciousness are entailments of an extended metaphor in which the operation of the mind is compared to the behavior of a liquid.

The metaphor does not just allow for these two entailments, but structures a range of discourses related to consciousness from the fields of psychology, technology and phenomenology. These include Csikszentmihalyi’s notion of flow (1990; 1997) immersion (Grau 2004), thought ripples (Greenfield 2001), and absorption (Gurwitsch 1979).

This deployment of a liquid metaphor in talking of consciousness has a long history and extensive current (sic.) use. Water, particularly, features significantly in many of the world’s religions and in mythological texts as a medium for describing cognitive states or processes which would otherwise be inconceivable, the most familiar of these probably being the Greek legends surrounding Lethe and Mnemosyne, the rivers of forgetting and remembering. Drawing on the Conceptual Metaphor Theory of Lakoff and Johnson (1999) and others, this metaphor can be shown not to be arbitrary and contingent, but as providing a consistent, coherent structure whereby the abstract notion of consciousness is made conceivable and articulate.

Clement, C. (1994). Syncope: The Philosophy of Rapture. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press.

Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). Flow: the psychology of optimal experience. New York, Harper & Row.

Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1997). Creativity: flow and the psychology of discovery and invention. New York, HarperPerennial.

Freud, S. (1989). Formulations Regarding The Two Principles in Mental Functioning. The Freud Reader. P. Gay. New York, Norton: 301-306.

Grau, O. (2003). Virtual art: from illusion to immersion. Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press.

Greenfield, S. A. and T. F. T. Collins (2005). A Neuroscientific Approach to Consciousness. Amsterdam, Elsevier B.V.

Gurwitsch, A. (1979). Human Encounters in the Social World. Pittsburgh, PA, Duquesne University Press.

James, W. (1981). The Principles of Psychology. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press.

Posted in Clement, Catherine, Conference Abstract, Consciousness, Csikszentmihalyi, Mihalyi, Flow, Freud, Sigmund, Greenfield, Susan, Gurswitch, Aron, James, William, Liquid, Metaphor, Phenomenology, Psychology, Religion | No Comments »

Folk Physics and Performer Training

April 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The first part of this paper will look at a range of training regimes associated with theatrical and public performance forms, paying particular attention to techniques which appear to enhance ‘presence’. Particular attention will be paid to body-based training practices. From this initial research key ideas and terms will be extracted that use metaphors which are drawn from and have accurate meaning in the physical sciences; terms such as energy and focus, and ideas such as ‘being centered’ and ‘extension’.

We will then go on to suggest that these ideas and terms can be seen as defining and articulating the physical laws and properties of a ‘universe’ in which the performance potential of individuals lodged within that universe is optimised. Put another way, the ‘folk physics’ which is routinely used to explain training exercises to students and performers will be examined in detail and general principles extracted.

If time permits we will then outline some practical devising and testing of techniques we have developed which use these coherent general principles as a basis for performer training.

Keywords: Folk Physics, Naive Physics, Performance, Metaphor, Embodiment.

(Time did not actually permit any practical demonstration of these ideas, but I could see some relationship between these ideas and the content of the ‘Details of Excellence’ workshop I went to.)

Posted in Conference Abstract, Metaphor, Naive Physics, Presence, Story, Training | No Comments »

50% Water, 40% Light

May 2nd, 2006 Fred McVittie

An analysis of metaphors used to describe the mind drawn from the writing of certain key psychology texts reveals that the contemporary mind is composed of the following ingredients:

Water (or similar liquid) 50%
Light 40%
Machine Parts (cogs etc.) 4%
Gas (or luminiferous ether) 2%
Faeces 2%
Electromagnetic Vacuum1%
Trace Elements 1%

(Please Note: in compiling this table, all references to homunculi have been excluded from the study.)

Posted in Metaphor, Mind | No Comments »

Overlapping concepts using the metaphor of light

May 15th, 2006 Fred McVittie

It is proposed that a key metaphor linking consciousness, presence, creativity, and enlightenment is that of light. Metaphorically they concepts all draw upon the image of moving into the light and out of the darkness.

1. The ‘light’ of consciousness is contrasted with the eldritch (and possibly forbidding) darkness of the unconscious.
2. Illumination is the stage of a creative process when a breakthrough or solution emerges into the light of consciousness, often characterised as a ‘light bulb moment’, or a ‘flash’ of inspiration.
3. Presence is the theatrical phenomenon of being entirely there, in the light of the present moment, (and often in the literal spotlight), as opposed to being partially or entirely elsewhere; in the wings, in the dressing room, offstage.
4. Enlightenment is the state of being in which one can see clearly through the shadows of illusion and ego that make up the world and the self.

This overlap of conceptual structure will be discussed, particularly in relation to the well known metaphorical relationship between seeing and knowing.

Posted in Consciousness, Creativity, Enlightenment, Illumination, Knowledge, Light, Metaphor, Presence, Seeing, Theatre | No Comments »

Shared Metaphors and Conceptual Overlap

May 16th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Abstract concepts which share a common metaphor tend to be perceived as related, and may be linked behaviourally, even when there is no actual and necessary concrete link between the concepts. An example of this phenomenon is outlined by George Lakoff when he demonstrates that the concepts anger and sexuality are linked through the common metaphor of heat. Through an analysis of texts and utterances relating to these two abstract concepts he shows not only that both are extensively understood through the entailments of this metaphor, but also that there is considerable ‘contamination’ of each concept by the contents of the other. So there is a tendency, through the workings of this structural overlap, for us to sexualise the expression of anger, and conversely (and much more problematically) to normalise the expression of violence and aggression within sexual practice.

This paper will cite a number of other key examples of such metaphorical imbrication and the impact that such overlap has in producing mixed or ‘contaminated’ concepts.

Posted in Abstract, Conference Abstract, Lakoff, George, Metaphor | No Comments »

Slowly Waking

May 16th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The passage from the unconsciousness of sleep to the consciousness of wakefullness is usually characterised as a singular, smooth, largely unstructured or indivisible event. The metaphors we use to describe this passage reflect this general impression, usually drawing upon an image of a single entity (the self) rising from a dark deep place to a higher, more brightly lit place. Typically this transition from dark to light is seen as relatively abrupt, as if one is breaking through a layer of some kind, or rising above a surface (of an ocean perhaps), or emerging from a closed container. This collection of metaphors presumably refers to the physical circumstances of sleep and waking, and is therefore embodied, like all abstract concepts.

Posted in Darkness, Light, Metaphor, Sleep | No Comments »

Essence Metaphors

May 29th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Folk theories of categories, combined with the fact that human beings seem to be ‘natural born dualists’ (Bloom) results in the concept of the essence, an intangible defining property which gives an entity its unique identity. Because this concept of an essence is inherently ineffable and abstract (not to mention objectively non-existent) it can only be conceptualised through the application of metaphors sourced from the concrete domain of lived and embodied experience. The dominant metaphors for the ontology and location of the essence are;

  • light
  • liquid
  • void
  • centre
  • interior (of the body)

References to the body often combine these metaphors or their entailments.

Posted in Bloom, Paul, Category, Essence, Metaphor | No Comments »

The Parameters of Liquidity

June 3rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The various uses to which a metaphor of is put are modulated not only by the entailments that accompany any such metaphor, but also by the natural variability in the parameters of the source of that metaphor. The range of variation in these parameters give a natural structure to the overall use of the metaphor across its many possible applications. In the case of the liquidity metaphor, in which a number of concepts are given the attribute of a liquid; mind, time, energy etc. the specific character of the concept can be fine tuned by modulating one or more of these parameters. The specific parameters available within the liquidity metaphor are:

  • Viscosity (or degree of crytallisation)
  • Depth
  • Expanse
  • Containment/canalisation
  • Motion (existence of, and type of)
  • Relationship to other elements (absorption, dissolution, flotation, etc)

Posted in Liquid, Metaphor | No Comments »

Lost Embodiment

June 6th, 2006 Fred McVittie

It has been observed that people who lack the physical means to experience certain sensations or behaviours nevertheless use metaphors associated with these sensations or behaviours in their speech and, presumably, in their thinking. For example, those blind from birth still often make extensive use of sight-based metaphors such as ‘I see what you mean’ etc. This is presumably (after Lakoff) because the neurological substrate and organisation supporting the use of such metaphors, the various neural pathways associated with vision, are in place, even though they are not able to be used by the actual sensory mechanisms. The suggestion is therefore that it is possible for neural pathways to exist, forged by evolution, which an individual may have no sensory access to but which may still be used by their differently equipped ‘metaphorical body’.

This begs the question of whether there are other neurological pathways forged by evolutionary experience which we have lost access to, not as individuals by accident of birth or by injury, but collectively by other means. (Possible candidate methods for this pruning of sensory awareness are the selecting out of biological traits through evolutionary adaptation, and the suppression of such ‘talents’ through socialisation/acculturation). It may well be that, even though we no longer have direct sensory access to particular sensations or are able to enact certain behaviours we may still have the neurological capacity to comprehend, in an conceptually embodied way, such sensations and behaviours. If we do, then we should not expect such pathways to figure metaphorically in our language, since in all likelihood any abilities we may have lost undoubtedly predate language.

The questions are; does our brain come pre-loaded with antique software that no longer runs literally on our current body platform (because we are incapable of breathing underwater, etc), and if it does, how can we may use of it?

Posted in Evolution, Metaphor, Sense | No Comments »

The Ocean and the Womb

June 10th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Many individuals report certain moments in their lives during which they experience a feeling of unbounded unity with all creation and an egoless merging with ‘the divine’. This is typically experienced during moments of highly novel and extreme stimulation (free diving, mountain climbing, etc), or moments of spiritual epiphany. Often this feeling is incorporated into cultural practice, either as part of religious or artistic observance, or less formally within the context of extreme sports, recreational drug use, etc.

This paper will suggest that the prototypical experience for this ‘oneness’ is that of floating in the amniotic sac prior to the partition moment of birth. At that literally pre-conceptual point in our ontogenic history there is no effective separation or ‘individuation’ between oneself and the environment in which that self is lodged. Floating in amniotic fluid we are literally ‘one with everything’. We are reminded of this experience non-conciously during moments of peak experience or religious epiphany when similar feelings of connected ‘oneness’ occur. It will be suggested that this is one of the reasons we tend to conceptualise and articulate these moments metaphorically using liquid metaphors, particularly those invoking the ‘oceanic’.

Posted in Liquid, Metaphor, Spirituality, Unity | No Comments »

Mirroring Metaphors of Liveness

June 14th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The metaphor of liveness has been used extensively to allow for an embodied understanding of a range of phenomena which would otherwise be conceptually incomprehensible. A sample of such metaphorical uses might include; live ammunition, live electrical cable, live political issues, liveness of a line of code in computer programming, etc. All of these phenomena have no sensory extension and do not figure in kinaesthetic image schema. They can therefore only figure in cognition by a process of metaphorical mapping. In all cases, some entailment of the liveness of a living being is mapped onto these abstract concepts, giving these concepts a structure and an embodied availability.

The widespread use of liveness as a metaphor has a strange effect on the original source of that metaphor, the live event or living being itself. It is almost impossible to experience a live event or being without the conceptualising of that event including some of the aspects of the target concept onto which that liveness is metaphorically mapped. When viewing the live event our understanding of that event is partly constructed in terms of live ammunition, live electrical cable, live issues etc. It is not only that electrical wires are understood in terms of living systems, but because of this mirroring back of the target concept, living systems are also understood partially in terms of electrical wires. Or rather, our understanding of live events and living beings now contains the physical signs and contexts of those other metaphorical applications. Performances are ‘explosive’, or ‘high voltage’.

Posted in Liveness, Metaphor, Performance | No Comments »

Axioms for an Imaginary Science of Performance

June 20th, 2006 Fred McVittie

An analysis of a range of techniques for the training of theatre performers reveals a high level of consistency and coherence in terminology. Although these techniques do not overtly claim to describe a world which differs from that of common sense or rational science, the paradigm and ’science’ of the physical world which is implied through this analysis is distinct in a number of ways. The axioms of an imaginary science of Performance might look something like this:

Space

  • Space is not empty, but consists of an etheric liquid through which objects move and energy is transferred.
  • Space is infinite and extends outward from the body of the performer in all directions.
  • The body of the performer is therefore always at the centre of space.
  • The central position occupied by the performer is also a fulcrum or axis around which the universe (space) is balanced
  • Whilst the space of the universe may move, the centre of the performer is motionless
  • Actions of the performer have an effect on the balance and properties of space.
  • The form of the performer’s body, e.g. its lateral symmetry and horizontal asymmetry, affect the regions of space extended from these areas of the body. The space to the left of the performer is different from the space to the right for example.
  • Part of the skill of optimal performance is the successful management of space.

Energy

  • The performer has access to energy resources which are both physical and psychic.
  • The energy controlled by the performer can affect the consistency and quality of the spatial ether.
  • The energy controlled by the performer can affect objects in space, including other performers or non-performing beings.
  • The energy controlled by the performer can be stored in or emitted from different parts of the performer’s body, or from locations outside of the performer’s body.
  • The quality of the energy used by the performer can be vary in a number of ways; intensity, mood etc.
  • The energy of the performer is a limited resource which can be depleted or replaced.
  • The energy of the performer is part of an energy economy which includes other performers, and the audience.
  • Part of the skill of optimal performance is the successful management of this energy.

Essence

  • The performer has an individual essence, possibly corresponding with a ‘soul’ or ‘purpose’.
  • The essence of the performer is the conduit for energy and the source for the application of will or intention.
  • The essence of the performer is separate from any internal representation they may have of self, body-image, physical image-schema, etc.
  • Part of the skill of optimal performance is the successful management of this essence.

Posted in Essence, Imagination, Metaphor, Performance, Poetics, Science, Theatre, Training | No Comments »

Listening as a Metaphor

June 22nd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The term ‘listening’ has been used to refer to a type of awareness or ‘openness’ unconnected to the reception of auditory stimulus. It is used metaphorically to describe a phase in creativity or intuition immediately prior to, and hopefully facilitative of, a moment of ‘breakthrough’ or ‘illumination’ . This undirected listening, a heightened sense of awareness without that awareness having an object, is also a feature of certain meditation techniques.

It is likely that parts of the the auditory system within the brain are being activated within this particular state, although clearly not in a way which is instrumental or intended to actually hear things in the outside world.

It is also likely that this form of ‘listening’, in which the action of paying auditory attention is carried out by the metaphorical body, rather than the physical body, has a significant synaesthetic component, since the type of intuitions or creative entities which emerge from this ‘listening’ are not necessarily auditory in nature.

Posted in Hearing, Illumination, Meditation, Metaphor, Synaesthesia | No Comments »

Flying through the Space of Thought

June 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The kind of processes we refer to when we arrange out thoughts, and the type of psychological gestures we make in order to move through our thoughts, suggests that cognitive organisation makes heavy use of a metaphor of space. The metaphor of the mind as a kind of spatially extended domain is one of the most important and robust mental structures. This space of thought roughly corresponds to Cartesian or Newtonian space, a fact which is evidenced in the language we use to talk about the contents and processes of our minds (streams of consciousness etc) and also in techniques for cognitive enhancement such as mnemonic systems like the method of loci, which uses the construction of elaborate storage spaces, so-called ‘memory palaces’, to enable easy retrieval of facts and ideas.

A significant departure from this schema is our ability to make intuitive leaps, or simply to allow our thoughts to hop from one topic to another without apparently crossing any intervening space. A number of subsidiary metaphors attempt to explain this phenomenon; William James, in addition to referring to the ’stream of consciousness’ also describes consciousness rather as a bird in flight. He says, ‘Our psychic life has rhythm: it is a series of transitions and resting-places, of “flights and perchings”‘ (PP 236). Also, a common feature of Buddhist meditation teaching is an attempt to tame the ‘monkey mind’, the tendency of consciousness to jump uncontrollably from one branch of knowledge to another. Both these metaphors invoke an image of space which, whilst still Cartesian, is not empty and unstructured but is somewhat like a forest. A space in which knowledge forms grow, interpenetrate, and spread, allowing a smooth linear passage from one to the next, but also a space through which it is possible to swing and swoop, catching knowledge on the fly.

Baby swifts leave their nests at a few weeks old, launching themselves on their first flight without any tuition or preparation. They then spend the next two years of their lives on the wing. It may be interesting to speculate on the possibilities of maintaining extended periods of flight in cognitive space. Staying airborne, like the swift, in the spaces between one idea and another.

Posted in Buddhism, James, William, Knowledge, Meditation, Metaphor, Mind, Space | No Comments »

The Kinesiology of Intuitive Listening

June 28th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Acts of organised intuition, such as are routinely attributed to such practices as psychotherapy and counselling, as well as creative practice and problem solving, routinely contain a phase referred to as ‘listening’ (1). This use of an embodied metaphor to describe an abstract concept, in this case the physical sense of listening standing in for the mental state of intuitive ’sensing’, is in line with the conceptual metaphor theories of Lakoff, Johnson and others. The cognitive concept of listening provides the image schema which structures the concept.

The close relationship between the physical schemata of the body and the image schemata which structure cognition suggests that the functioning of these metaphorical organs can be enhanced by engaging the body in specific behaviours. Intuitive listening, for example, can be enhanced by paying attention to the kinesiological or proprioceptive accompaniments to the act of normal auditory listening. Typically, active auditory listening is accompanied by specific postural and somatic realignments; eye gaze direction, head tilt, breath control, etc. Adopting these postures, either physically or imaginatively with the metaphorical body, can enhance or facilitate intuitive listening.

Petitmengin-Peugeot, C. (1999). “The Intuitive Experience.” Journal of Consciousness Studies 6(2-3): 43-77.

Posted in Hearing, Intuition, Johnson, Mark, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Petitmengin-Peugeot, C., Proprioception, Schema | No Comments »

Disgusting Girls (and Ron Athey)

June 29th, 2006 Fred McVittie

One of the presentations today included some footage of a Ron Athey piece, which some people in the audience were clearly having problems with. It is interesting to note what people do when they are disgusted by something. There was a lot of squirming. According to the conceptual metaphor theory of Lakoff and Johnson and others, a possible reason why they/we were doing this is because of a process of cognitive metaphor creation. The mind effectively maps the structure of the physical and emotional response from the concrete concept of something pathogenically disgusting like a toxic substance onto the abstact concept of ‘deviant’ sexuality, such that we get ‘DEVIANT’ SEXUALITY IS A TOXIC SUBSTANCE. The details of the behavior which follows, lip curling (as if at a bitter taste), nose wrinkling (as if at a bad smell), and mouth gape (in preparation for vomiting) are metaphorical projections from the concrete concept onto the abstract concept enacted as a physical schema or performance.

Another revealing feature of the disgust reflex is that, once learnt through embodied experience with real TOXIC SUBSTANCES, the behaviour is then available not only for unconscious metaphorical mapping onto abstract concepts (as in the case of the Ron Athey video) but as an intentional gestalt performance which can be consciously activated to indicate moral or ethical disgust. An interesting example of this from my own experience is observing my children, both boys, metaphorically mapping GIRLS ARE A TOXIC SUBSTANCE. Before the age of around 6 this mapping did not exist, but from 6 onward the presence of a girl stimulated all aspects of the disgust reflex indicated above. From the age of around 12 however, this physical schema has become more of a conscious performance which is activated only in certain contexts (when they are with their friends), and which is clearly in competition with other physical schema presumably appropriate to metaphors such as GIRLS ARE RARE AND UNUSUAL OBJECTS, and even GIRLS ARE PEOPLE.

Posted in Art, Gesture, Johnson, Mark, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Performance, Schema, Story | No Comments »

Poetic Dualism

July 6th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Despite the best attempts by philosophy and science to deny the dualism which is such a part of folk science, a tendency unfairly attributed to Descartes, but actually deeply entrenched in the human psyche, such dualism still dominates much debate. As Paul Bloom suggests, we may be ‘natural born dualists’. Efforts to collapse this duality, whether it be termed as a duality of mind and body, or brain and mind, or matter and spirit, have tended not to provide an integrated model, but simply to deny the existence of one or other of the terms.

Part of the distinction between these terms, and which is used in the suppression of supporters of the one by supporters of the other, is the language which is used to talk about the concepts which form each part of the dualism. There is a perceived difference in the type of discourse which represents the brain, for example, and that which represents the mind. The former is objective, noumenal, scientific, whereas the latter is subjective, phenomenal, poetic.

Recent developments in the study of cognition, however, suggests that this distinction is largely unsupportable.Work carried out by Lakoff, Johnson, etc indicates that the only epistemological distinction to be made is between concepts which are concrete and those which are abstract, not between those concepts which are objective and those which are subjective. Concrete concepts are those which are directly available to the senses, which have tangible and physical attributes. Abstract concepts, which make up most of our thoughts and language, are not available to the senses and can therefore only be represented in cognition through a process of metaphorical mapping.Given that most conceptualisation about both the brain and the mind is necessarily abstract, the mind not being directly available to the senses, then all discourses on the subject of the mind are necessarily structured through metaphor.

Any integration between discourses, if such integration is desirable, must start with a recognition that both objective and subjective discourses around abstract concepts are ultimately poetic.

Posted in Bloom, Paul, Brain, Dualism, Johnson, Mark, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Mind, Poetics | No Comments »

Liquid Love

July 7th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The various states of consciousness alluded to using the metaphor of a liquid are comprehensive and consistent, from the ’stream’ of individual consciousness at one end to the ‘oceanic’ experience of non-individuated ego loss at the other. In between these states a range of states and conditions are similarly articulated using this metaphor, including flow, immersion, absorbtion, etc. These states are not only rational and logical however, but are also heavily informed by, or rather constructed with, emotional content and responses. The ‘oceanic’ feeling identified by William James is a notable example. Initially associated with the overpowering divine adoration of religious experience, this concept was reframed by Freud in terms of that other great first love, a baby’s ecstasy of embrionic and amniotic immersion within the body and the ego of the mother prior to partition, birth, and the individuating rigours of childhood. In both readings, one religious and the other ontogenic, the metaphor of a vast ocean stands in not only for undividedness, but for undivided love. Immersion and dissolution in this ocean is a kind of death, not of the body but of the ego, and we see miniature versions of this death, this dissolution, in the small death of sexual orgasm (in French le petit mort), and in the sacrificial ego loss when we are drowned in romantic love.

Posted in Feeling, Freud, Sigmund, James, William, Liquid, Love, Metaphor | No Comments »

Space and Relation

July 16th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The family of concepts articulating how one entity is described in relation to another entity are generally known by the term ‘Relationship’. This term, and the concepts it covers, are inherently abstract, and is therefore understood through a metaphorical mapping from a concrete concept; one that can be directly experienced by the sensorimotor system of the human body. All relationships are understood through a conceptual mapping of the concrete concept of space. Different types of relationship are understood through mappings of the various dimensions of experiential space.

  • Status, amount, and quality use the vertical dimension (high status, high quality, high turnover)
  • Affection, necessity, and safety use the dimension of proximity (close friendship, distant possibility, near miss)
  • Mereology (part/whole relations) use the dimension of containment (”I am in the club”)
  • Temporal relations use the in front/behind schema (”the week ahead”, “the worst is behind us”)

Posted in Embodiment, Metaphor, Space, Time | No Comments »

Universal Physics

July 17th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The development of the science of physics, particularly over the last 400 years, can be seen as the triumph of a particular approach to knowledge gathering. This approach disregards the position of the human being within the scientific process, and attempts to construct an objective position outside of incarnate humanity from which to regard the world. In order to achieve objectivity it is necessary to consciously abandon our embodiment as ‘medium sized objects moving at medium speed’ (Dawkins 2003), and embrace an organised scepticism toward the data of the senses and the common sense which these senses produce. This in turn has required an increasing reliance on the (apparently) disembodied language of mathematics . Alongside this evacuation of the human being from its privileged position at the heart of physics is the corresponding development of a set of protocols for the objective verification and falsification of knowledge, enshrined in the idealisations of the scientific method. This project, the construction of Rational Physics through mathematisation and scientification, has been astonishingly successful, and its creations and discoveries are truly awe inspiring. However, the creation of new conscious knowledge does not necessarily mean the erasure of the old, and even though the findings of physics are as close to factual as we are likely to get, they still may not get us ‘where we live’. Science may have abandoned the body at some point in the late 16th Century, but as functioning humans we still take it around with us everywhere we go. Also, whilst our consciousness may be able to engage with the mathematical abstractions of quantum theory and dark energy, our non-conscious cognition (and actually much of our conscious, in the form of covert metaphors) is still working with the tools provided by an embodied evolution.

Within the system of beliefs, biases, misconceptions, common sense, and generalisations that Brown (1991) identified as ‘Human Universals’ there are a subset which refer specifically to matter, energy, and their interactions. In any formal, rational system of knowledge constructed through the protocols of science, this subset of knowledge would be called ‘physics’. In the context of human universals, which operates without scientific protocols but only with the innate and accumulated knowledge that comes with embodiment, this subset could be referred to as ‘Universal Physics”, a set of general principles and theories about the way the world works that is held by all cultures, and that is a result of a common biology and a common evolutionary history. While Rational Physics is the physics of the disembodied universe of atoms, quarks, membranes, black holes, and quanta. Universal Physics (UP) is the physics of dreams, intuition, emotion, art, God, and human frailty.

(Note: The “Universal Physics” referred to here is in no way connected to that proposed by Ethan Skyler http://www.physicsnews1.com/ or of the ‘commonsense science’ of Barnes, Bergman, Collins and Lucas http://www.commonsensescience.org/ )

Brown, D. E. (1991). Human Universals. New York, McGraw-Hill.
Dawkins, R. and L. Menon (2003). A devil’s chaplain: selected essays. London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson.

Posted in Brown, D. E., Dawkins, Richard, Embodiment, Evolution, History, Mathematics, Metaphor, Physics, Universals | No Comments »

Spurious Constructions

July 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

Organised theoretical edifices, including scientific theories, metaphysical systems, and belief complexes, often contain entities which we may have no direct evidence of, but which must be posited to exist if the theory/belief is to maintain coherence. Such entities may be inferred circumstantially and may eventually turn out to be valid and ‘real’, or may be found to be purely fictitious. Non-real historical examples of such entities include epicycles, luminiferous ether, caloric, and ‘muelos’. An example of such a postulated entity which was subsequently acquired reality status is the planet Uranus, discovered not by observation but by inference, based on perturbations in the orbits of other heavenly bodies. It is tempting to assume that scientific progress and the dominance of rational physics in formulating evidence about the real world would reduce the reliance on such speculative entities, or at least that once an entity was found to be fictional that it would cease to appear in discourse (in the way that caloric does not routinely appear). However, this is not entirely the case, sometimes such fictions are allowed to survive in the language and in conception because they provide a particular human function related to the embodied nature of subjective being, as opposed to the disembodied nature of objective knowledge. Examples of such fictional entities might include: energy (as a substance or force), colours (as distinct, bounded entities), weight (as a property of substances and objects).

Routine discourse which includes reference to abstract concepts which can only be understood through the use of these spurious constructions, which function largely through the application of metaphors.

Posted in Belief, Fiction, Metaphor, Substance, Theory | No Comments »

Sensorimotor Origins of Universal Physics

July 27th, 2006 Fred McVittie

“Experiential models of the world are based on sensorimotor and visual experiences with environments, and form in individual minds as the associated bodies and senses experience their worlds. Formal models consist of axioms expressed in a formal language, together with mathematical rules to infer conclusions from them. ” (Mark, 1996)

Universal Physics describes an experiential model of the world based on sensorimoter experience, particularly the experiences provided by the visual and the proprioceptive senses. This model is partly ‘hard wired’ through evolutionary processes, and partly developed through the body’s experiencing of the world. This is in contrast with Rational Physics, which describes a formal model of the world, this model being axiomatic and produced through formal non-embodied languages, particularly mathematics. Although, as Nunez & Lakoff (2000), and Jones (1983) point out, the most formal and apparently abstract languages of science, including that of ‘pure maths’ are deeply embodied through metaphorical mapping of sensorimotor experience, so this contrast is somewhat illusory.

Posted in Jones, Stephen, Metaphor, Nunez, Rafael, Physics, Universals | No Comments »

Mind, Performance, Creativity, Attention

July 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

There is a high level of correlation between the following phenomena and concepts:

  • experienced states of mind
  • brainwave patterns
  • use of attentional resources (energy)
  • phases in creative processes
  • phases in the performance of a task (including theatrical or art tasks)

These correlations suggest the functioning of a common process which, in all likelihood, in partly material and partly metaphorical. A greater awareness of this process should allow for the development of techniques for greater control over the process, and a consequent enhancement or optimisation of the performance of a range of tasks (including theatrical tasks) and enhanced creativity.

Posted in Creativity, Energy, Metaphor, Mind, Neuroscience, Performance, Theatre | No Comments »

Moments of Change in Creativity metaphors

August 6th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The dominant metaphors of creative processes all contain a phase during which a rapid change is affected. This might be variously described as a ‘breakthrough’, a ‘turning point’, or as a moment of ‘illumination’ depending upon which metaphor is being invoked. This moment of change, which is usually assumed to be indivisible and of short time span, is not present in metaphors for processes which we are regarded as less creative; building, ‘handicrafts’, folk art, etc.

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Levels of Metaphor

August 8th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Although all abstract concepts are rendered comprehensible through the use of embodied metaphor, there is no clear division between the concrete and the abstract. It is more useful to consider metaphor operating at various levels of remove.

  • Functional and operational actions performed by the body are clearly not metaphorical and are the most ‘concrete’
  • Gestures and words which ’stand in’ for these concrete actions are similarly concrete, although there may be an element of metonymy in their isolation of a particular element of a concrete action.
  • Words for concepts or entities which have no physically experienced properties can only be rendered linguistically by using reference to concrete actions/objects, i.e. metaphor.
  • Non-natural languages can be developed to discuss certain abstract concepts based on the systematisation of concrete embodied metaphors, e.g. Mathematics, poetry.

Posted in Abstract, Embodiment, Gesture, Mathematics, Metaphor, Poetics | 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.

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Metaphors of Partial Presence

August 14th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Although the fort da logic of perception and experience suggests that an entity is either present or absent (there or not there), in actuality we seem to be able to conceive of presence/being as a property which has more than a binary function, but which can exist as a continuum. The cognitive facility to conceive of entities as partial, which is clearly an abstraction, is achieved through metaphorical mapping from concrete experiences in which entities appear to reduce their level of presence. The key metaphors for this partial presence are; distance, fragmentation, and transparency.

Posted in Metaphor, Perception, Presence | No Comments »

Naïve science and coherent metaphors

August 15th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The principles of a naïve science, otherwise referred to as folk science (folk physics, folk psychology etc) are held coherently by an overlapping set of metaphors. That is, that whilst such ‘sciences’ may not correspond to rational science, and may not be structurally complete, that they nevertheless do find coherence, and a sense of completeness, through the use of metaphor, particularly in the entailments to such metaphors (following Lakoff and Johnson 1987). Metaphorical entities are postulated, such as the ´luminiferous ether´, which bring together in an easily embodied understandable way, elements of the observed reality which otherwise (actually) are only coherent through their connections to a disembodied rational science.

Posted in Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Naive Physics, Science | No Comments »

Education, Metaphors, and Mirror Neurons

August 19th, 2006 Fred McVittie

It has been shown that the areas of the brain which are activated when we carry out an action, say grasping, are also activated when we imagine the activity. This is sometimes referred to as a simulation. Furthermore, these same areas are activated when we read about or witness someone else carrying out the action of grasping. This simulation, or mirroring of the action seems to be a key component in understanding the action or the meaning of the word (Feldman and Narayanan 2004), and the process is occasionally referred to as the action of ‘mirror neurons’.

The significance of these findings for metaphor studies is that these same areas of the brain are also activated when we read about or hear an utterance which makes metaphorical use of the term ‘to grasp’, for example; to grasp and idea; to grasp an opportunity. This implies that the metaphorical mapping of concrete, body-based concepts onto abstract concepts is not only a function of the minds cognitive processes, but is also taking place at a neural level. The patterns of neuronal firings which occur during metaphor usage are, in effect, the neural correlates of concepts.

The implication of these findings for educators and students will be discussed, particularly in relation to the teaching and learning of abstract or metaphysical concepts.

Posted in Grasp, Metaphor, Mirror neurons, Neuroscience | No Comments »

The Tao of Water

August 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

The metaphors which we use to conceptualise time overlap significantly with with those for being and energy. This metaphor is water-based and allows for these three distinct phenomena to be merged or synthesised. A particularly significant example of this synthesis is in the Chinese philosophy of the Tao, (which Alan Watts refers to as ‘The Watercourse Way’ [1975]), and in which these three phenomona are merged into a single concept.

Posted in Energy, Liquid, Metaphor, Time | No Comments »

Space Mind Metaphor

September 6th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Space is a key concept, perhaps the most important key concept, in Naive Physics. Remembering that Naive Physics is an extended field of knowledge that includes mental entities such as consciousness (Smith 1994) it is not surprising that our understanding of the mind itself in turn draws on spatial metaphors to structure that understanding. In other words, the Naive Physics of cognition imagines the mind as spatial. We talk of consciousness being ‘raised’, (following a general metaphor GOOD IS UP), and we may think of ourselves and other people as being ‘broadminded’ or ‘narrowminded’. Techniques, experiences, and chemicals for altering the state of one’s mind positively are routinely referred to as ‘mind expanding’. Generally these metaphors rely on two further assumptions about the mind, both of which are also features of naive science.

Dualism - that the mind is radically separate from the brain, possibly to the extent that it can have independent existence (as in the pre-psychological notion of the immortal soul).

Vitalism - that the mind is composed of a non-material, ‘ethereal’ substance which is often conceptualised as gaseous or liquid, (c.f. ‘flow’, the ‘oceanic’, ’streams of consciousness’ etc).
In this formulation when we talk about the mind we conceive it as a vital substance existing within Newtonian/Cartesian space, centred on the person.

With these two features in place, when we use spatial metaphors to talk and think of the mind we imagine this fluid mind-stuff, centred behind the eyes, as expanding and contracting; flowing from one part of the body to another and capable of extension outside of the body through processes we refer to as concentration, focus, attention, etc.

Posted in Dualism, Liquid, Metaphor, Mind, Smith, Barry, Space, Vitalism | No Comments »

Physics, Maths, and Metaphor

September 8th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The language of both rational and naive physics make extensive use of metaphor in its conceptualisation of abstract entities such as energy, particle etc. A significant difference in the discourse of these two physics (over and above any difference in their application) is that rational physics is underpinned and consequently legitimised by the digital logos of an apparently non-metaphorical transcendent mathematics. However, as Nunez et al (1999, 2004) and Lakoff and Nunez (2000) point out, the apparent transcendent status of mathematics is something of an illusion, and maths is itself ‘grounded’ in embodied metaphor. This does not disturb the significance of rational physics, or undermine the robustness of its findings, but it does indicate that the validity of rational physics is due not to inherent relationship to a transcendent disembodied knowledge. Rather, the coherence and efficacy of rational physics is a result of its referring to and resting on a single limited set of metaphors; those which we use to conceptualise mathematics.

Posted in Mathematics, Metaphor, Nunez, Rafael, Physics | No Comments »

A Dream about Mixed Metaphors

September 11th, 2006 Fred McVittie

I had a dream last night about a world without any objects. Everything was unstable, in flux, but not chaotic or confusing. What would happen is that I would look at something, and that looking would be accompanied by a thought, and then as my stream of consciousness proceeded then as my thoughts changed this would physically change the thing I was looking at. It was as if I was watching the motion of my own thinking. I can only assume the dream was a reflection of the material on metaphor I have been hearing about; that as the metaphors which comprise my conceptualisation of experience shift, then the experience itself shifts. This kind of shifting presumably happens all the time in non-conscious cognition; I am thinking about something, love for example, and (usually unconsciously) understanding it as a PATH, and then my metaphorical understanding of that shifts so that I (again usually unconsciously) start to understand it as a CONTAINER. This suggests that however stable and consistent the external world may be, the internal, symbolically (metaphorically) structured, world must be much more motile. Many of the elements of the external world which we regard as object-like, particularly abstract concepts like love, justice, truth, etc. must exist in our minds as variable, transformable entities; PATHS can turn into CONTAINERS and then into BATTLES, and then into a DANCE. The symbolic universe of the unconscious must undergo these kind of transformations all the time, and these transformations should be surreal but not arbitrary; they should follow the logic of cognitive linguistics. I think it must be a vision of that universe that I dreamed about.

Posted in Cognitive Linguistics, Dream, Metaphor, Sleep, Story, Transformation | 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 »

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.

Posted in Claxton, Guy, Cognition, Metaphor, Mind, Object, Space, Substance | No Comments »

Metaphors of Mind

September 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The use of metaphor to describe and conceptualise mind is inevitable because of its inherently abstract nature. As Guy Claxton puts it (referring specifically to the unconscious), ‘you can’t put it up against the wall and photograph it.” This use of metaphor in cognition and in natural language is not only a feature of ‘commonsense’ descriptions of the mind (Barnden), but also structures academic and scientific thought on this subject. As has been noted by Barnden, Pasanek, Lakoff, and others, there are a large number of metaphors for mind and mental processes including, animals, architecture, garden features, war, weather, and writing. (Pasanek); for the purposes of this writing, this list will be collated into three key groups; objects, substances, and spatial metaphors. It can be demonstrated that all of the metaphors listed can be allocated to one or more of these three groups, or derived from combinations of the groups.

Posted in Barnden, J. A., S. O’Nuallain, et al, Claxton, Guy, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Object, Panasek, Brad, Space, Substance | No Comments »

Mind Metaphors and States of Consciousness

September 19th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The various metaphors which we use to describe mind can be broadly gathered in three key groups; objects, substances, and spaces. The application of metaphor from each of these groupings is largely dependent upon the particular mental function or mental state one is trying to conceptualise of describe, and some metaphors lend themselves particularly well to describing complex states of mind and forms of consciousness. An example of this, drawn from the Substance group of metaphors, is that of MIND IS A LIQUID. The entailments of this metaphor, drawn from the variable properties and qualities of the source, allows a wide range of mental states to be conceptualised and described, and for these concepts to be structured in an organised way in accordance with the organisation of the source metaphor. LIQUID, typically water, can undergo a range of transformations, from solid ice to vaporous gas. It is capable of flowing and making its own channel, but also of being contained. When heated in a sealed container it is known for increasing in pressure and possibly exploding, when cooled it solidifies and acquires the form of the container holding it. Water can both be absorbed and can dissolve; taking other material into itself, or entering into other material completely. All these entailments, drawing on the variable properties of liquids, particularly water, structure the particular ontology of mind which draws on the MIND IS A LIQUID metaphor.

Posted in Liquid, Metaphor, Mind, Transformation | No Comments »

McGinn’s Space of the Mind

September 22nd, 2006 Fred McVittie

McGinn’s (1997) problems with relating an unextended consciousness to an extended physical world; res cogitans to res extensa, stem from an inherent dualism of his position, a dualism not of matter and mind but of a distinction between mind and the contents of mind. This dualism is, in turn, derived ultimately from the space metaphor which McGinn draws on to frame the concepts he uses. He interestingly uses the example of the mental image of a ‘yellow flash’ (presumably of light) to indicate that such thoughts do not have extension, and that therefore mind is similarly non-extended.

… it takes up no particular volume of space; it has no shape; it is not made up of spatially distributed parts; it has no spatial dimensionality; it is not solid.

However, this image, like all images of light, only makes sense within the context of a larger unspoken metaphor of space. In order for us to understand his reference to a yellow flash at all we have to conceive it as a spark of light, and like all such phenomena, real or imagined, light requires a source, a point in space from which to be emitted. It also usually requires an object on which to fall and most definately an empty space through which to radiate. Without the latter there simply is no light, the concept is incomplete and incoherent. In claiming that the image is unextended he is artificially limiting the parts of the metaphor which he claims as ‘mind’ to the yellow flash, ignoring the fact that the metaphor demands that the spatial entailments also must be considered as similarly constituting the mind. Not only the object at the centre of McGinn’s image, the yellow flash, is mind, but also the objects illuminated (the ‘contents of consciousness’) and the space within which light and objects exist.

McGinn, Colin.
1995. Consciousness and Space. Journal of Consciousness Studies 2: 220-30. Reprinted in Shear (1997).

Shear, Jonathan, ed.
1997. Explaining Consciousness. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.1

Posted in Consciousness, McGinn, Colin, Metaphor, Mind, Space | No Comments »

Object metaphors of Mind - Mind is a Book

September 24th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Within the range of metaphors for mind there are a significant number which are sourced from conrete experiences with objects. (As noted elsewhere, the other key metaphor groups are substances and spaces.) Of the object metaphors, one which a lengthy history and considerable contemporary application and significance is the MIND IS A BOOK metaphor. This usage is found in the writings of Thomas Aquinas and, also in the modern theoretical concept of the ‘Narrative Self’. The power of the book metaphor is that it allows for the generation of numerous entailments which organise the complex, and in many ways inconceivable, abstraction that we refer to as mind. These entailments include such elements as narrative, character, author, ending, closure, etc.

Posted in Book, Metaphor, Mind, Object | No Comments »

Coherent metaphors and Efficacy

September 25th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The effectiveness with which we are able to deal with a situation or problem depends significantly on the the type of consciousness we bring to that situation or problem. Some situations require highly focussed, unselfconscious thought, others require a high level of self-monitoring, etc. In order to gain access to these different cognitive states, and benefit from their application, it is necessary to have a coherent and intelligible ‘map’ of the various states one might put oneself in, and how these states relate to each other and to external features of the world at large. Given the abstract nature of cognition and consciousness it is inevitable that such ‘maps’ are metaphorical (as indeed is this description, in its use of the term ‘maps’). One such ‘map’ of the various states of consciousness utilises the metaphor of space.

An important aspect of this metaphorical mapping is that the users of the metaphor function more effectively, i.e. are able to enter subtly different states of consciousness more readily, when they are presented with the entire map outlining all of the states, not when they are introduced to it piecemeal. It is more effective also when a consistent metaphor is used throughout. For example, to talk about one form of consciousness as if it were a substance (e.g. a flowing liquid) and another as a spatial location (e.g. being ‘centered’), clearly mixes the metaphors and does not provide a single coherent structure for the various concepts to inhabit.

Posted in Consciousness, Consilience, Metaphor, Performance, Space, Training | No Comments »

Spirituality as a Metaphor

September 28th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Spirituality - The application of the substance metaphor to feelings of unity, awe, and selflessness. Since feelings are inherently abstract, and can only be conceptualised through the use of concrete metaphor, such application is typical. In this case, these feelings (which Newberg and D’Aquili refer to as absolute unity of being), are conceptualised as a vaporous or liquid substance; one that moves between evansence and flow, much as a chemical spirit might behave. This substance metaphor is often combined with an anthropomorphic sense of agency applied to that substance such that the spirit is given intention and human-like attributes.

Posted in Agency, D'Aquili, Eugene, Metaphor, Spirituality, Substance | No Comments »

Metaphors for Change

September 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The particular metaphor one chooses to understand one’s own mind affects one’s phenomenological experience of that mind, and of aspects of the wider world. In other words, how you imagine yourself affects how you feel, and consequently how and at what level you are able to perform. In many ways, this is an obviousness; it has long been considered a fact that in order to do one’s best one should think ‘positively’, not have ‘low self esteem’, be ‘in the zone’, avoid ’self-consciousness’ etc. What is possibly not immediately obvious is that all these terms are metaphorical; there is no physical state which can be scientifically measured as ‘positive’ or ‘negative’, there is no real mental ‘zone’, self-esteem is not an object that might rise or fall in space, and there is no homuncular ’self’ outside of our normal consciousness which we might become literally aware of as a separate being. These terms, and the concepts and feelings they refer to, only make sense because of the use the mind makes of metaphor, using concrete physical experiences such as objects, height, space, amount etc to understand abstract entities like esteem. Furthermore, these metaphors, like all linguistic elements, do not make sense on their own, but because they are each part of coherent complex metaphorical models which structure a range of related concepts. For example, the low in low self esteem only makes sense because of a coherent set of understandings related to height including such elements as above, below, high, low, bottom, top, rise, fall, drop, float etc.

Once such a metaphor system is constructed, it becomes possible to discuss the otherwise abstract concepts referred to. It may also make available possible actions which affect one’s mental state and performance. For example, without the spatial metaphor implied by ‘low self-esteem’ there would not be the possibility of talking about ‘raising’ self-esteem or or any actions which might bring such ‘raising’ about. Part of the role of a trainer or counsellor is to assist in the construction of a form of understanding which is helpful in the optimisation of performance. A key way this might be achieved is through the sharing of a coherent metaphor for mental function which allows for the possibility of positive change.

Posted in Embodiment, Metaphor, Performance, Training, Up | No Comments »

Spirituality (Definition)

October 9th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Spirit - an emotional response corresponding to love, compassion, awe,etc. in which the experience of the emotion is conceptualised as a physical entity. This (metaphorical) entity is usually conceived of as an invisible ether permeating space, or sometimes as space itself, and is often given the attribution of agency or intentionality (God).

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I Hear What You Are Saying

October 18th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The sensory modes which we use metaphorically to refer to different types of knowledge also correspond to different proximal relations in metaphorical space. Experience which we regard as producing ‘objective’ knowledge is thought of using visual metaphors which place the object of that knowledge at an imagined distance, separate from ourselves. When speaking of this knowledge we say ‘I see’. Experiences which we regard as producing ’subjective’ knowledge on the other hand is thought of using tactile metaphors which collapse any imagined distance between ourselves and the ‘object’ of that knowledge. These is no separation between the experience and ourselves and when we speak of this experience we say ‘I feel’.

Between these two types of knowledge production strategies these is a third corresponding to the sense of hearing. In this the boundaries of the subject and object are not clearly drawn, as they are in the visual mode, but are also not completely collapsed, as they are in the tactile mode. When we hear something there is a sense that the sound is not located only with the object making the sound, the sense object, but is also occupying the space around us, and possibly even the space inside us. The object emits the sound and that sound permeates space and self. This contrasts with the experience of visual sensing, in which the experience is located not only distant from ourselves but also entirely within the boundaries of the experience itself; we do not see an object as extending into space through the light reflecting off its surfaces (even though that is exactly what is happening; the objects are really ‘holes’ in the light). This ambiguous knowedge reveals itself in language through such expressions as ‘I hear what you are saying’, which we use to indicate that the experience being articulated is understood but not necessarily given objective status. We use this expression to mean that, whilst a fact may appear to be an objective fact to someone else, we experience it as having a significant subjective component.

Posted in Hearing, Knowledge, Metaphor, Sense | No Comments »

Feelings aren’t Facts

October 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

We come to know and understand abstract concepts through the metaphorical application of non-abstract embodied concepts. These concepts, which are entirely familiar and concrete, and include such things as physical objects, journeys, containers, etc., are organised ‘naturally’ into different sensory modes; those which are apprehended visually, aurally, kinaesthetically, gustatory, olfactorily, and as tactile experience. Therefore our understanding of abstract concepts is likely to be similarly organised into different metaphorical sensory modes. There is certainly an apparent order to the way we use language to articulate different types of abstract concepts; those which we regard as objective (e.g. justice, truth, etc) tend to be described using visual metaphors, whereas those which are thought of as subjective (love, hate, etc) are often spoken of using metaphors of touch. Abstract concepts which are objectified through the use of visual metaphor are awarded the status usually attributed to objects; permanence, boundedness, etc, whereas those which are not objectified in this way but are understood using tactile metaphors are regarded as ‘feelings’, and as everyone knows, feelings aren’t facts.

Posted in Abstract, Metaphor, Objectivity, Seeing, Sense, Smell, Taste, Touch | No Comments »

Knowing and Sensing

October 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

Our experience of the world is mediated and organised through the senses, and the various sensory modes give us different information about the world, as well as implying different relationships between ourselves and the source of the sensory information. Events which stimulate the visual sense, i.e. things that we see, are obviously outside of our body, possibly even a considerable distance from our body, and therefore may or may not have a direct ‘impact’ on our wellbeing. Visualised objects are also (usually) also visible to other people, existing in interpersonal shared space, which means that objects apprehended visually are likely to have similar significance for all viewers (seeing a tiger is likely to cause anyone in visible range to run away). Objects and events which are apprehended through the sense of touch, on the other hand (sic) do, by definition, have a direct impact on the body doing the touching, they are in extreme proximity to that body, and are likely to have a greater significance for the person touched than for someone else who is not in contact with the object, (touching a flame causes a significantly different response than seeing one). This suggests that there is a structured and organised variation in experience depending upon which sense is primarily used to access that experience.

Given that we draw substantially on embodied experience to organise and structure our knowledge of the world which is abstract (i.e. non-concrete) through the use of conceptual metaphor it is likely that abstract concepts will also be organised according to the various sensory modes. Indeed we do find this distinction, with entities which we regard as ‘objective’ being referred to using visual metaphor, thus placing them in a shared conceptual space where they appear similar to all (metaphorical) viewers, whilst those entities we regard as ’subjective’ are often referred to using tactile metaphors. Such subjective entities are held metaphorically against the body where they are ‘felt’, an individual experience with an acknowledged difference in impact for the ‘feeler’ than for the objective ‘viewer’.

The metaphorical application of the senses of smell and taste appear to be less widespread than that of sight and touch, although there does seem to be a relatively consistent mapping from the sense of taste to an aesthetic response to experience, as when we might say that some idea is ‘distasteful’. There may also be some consistency in the mapping of the sense of smell onto concepts which have moral implications, as for example when we say that an abstract idea ’stinks’. Since there is considerable crossover in the concrete experiences of smell and taste it is likely that this crossover will also appear in their metaphorical use of these senses to describe abstract concepts.

Posted in Knowledge, Metaphor, Objectivity, Seeing, Sense, Smell, Taste, Touch | No Comments »

Metaphors and Mental Optimisation

October 24th, 2006 Fred McVittie

  1. Many human processes are made up of a number of different phases.
  2. Our ability to engage in each phase in a process is optimised by the adopting of an appropriate mental state.
  3. A significant phase in many human processes is that of performance.
  4. Our ability to perform optimally is therefore partly dependent upon the particular mental state we are in whilst we in the performance phase.
  5. Mental states are (possibly) organised through the application of embodied metaphor
  6. One way to enter a mental state appropriate to the performance phase is through an act of imagination in which an appropriate set of metaphors is mobilised.

Posted in Imagination, Metaphor, Performance | No Comments »

Dreams and Metaphors

October 31st, 2006 Fred McVittie

We tend to assume that dreams are only the workings of our minds at night, possibly the random firings of sets of neurons, or maybe the sign of some cognitive filing process, or maybe even signs of psychic distress or disorder. These dreams only come out at night, and they live inside our heads; private, unseen, and personal. We also have public dreams however, and a naive reading of any newspaper reveals these dreams to us. Hiding within the bald and apparently transparent language of even the most formal and rational texts; of science, art, business or politics, is another language of metaphors and symbols. The embodied metaphors we use to articulate and conceive of such abstract concepts as ‘love’, ‘justice’, and even ‘conceive’, are routinely invisible to us as metaphors; habitual use has led us to ignore their metaphorical status and accept them as somehow ‘real’. On some level we must know the truth however, that when we talk and think about ‘justice’ an image of a set of scales, or of a profit and loss account, is forming in the recesses of our minds. When we talk about ‘love’ half hidden thoughts of journeys is structuring that thought. These metaphors which constantly pace our wide awake existence together comprise the constant dreams we all have. Dreams of bodies in spaces.

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Imaginary Senses

November 2nd, 2006 Fred McVittie

In some non-Western traditions, thought is sometimes considered a ’sixth sense’; a mode of experiencing the world distinct from the sensory modes of touch, taste, hearing etc. However, thought might be more accurately considered not as an additional sense but as the metaphorical application of the usual sensory modes to the contents of cognition. Thought does not exist distinct from the set of senses we use to gather experience. Rather we utilise the embodied experience of gathering data via the senses, and organising that data, to the gathering and organisation of data which, because of its abstract nature, is unavailable to the senses. The action of ‘thinking about’ an abstract concept such as justice does not employ a special thinking sense, instead there is a process in which, through the application of metaphor, the concept of justice is given an imaginary form which is (theoretically) available to the senses. We are then able to imaginatively (and non-consciously) ‘visualise’ the concept of justice, or we are able to ‘feel’ it in some way, (as when we ‘feel’ that an injustice has been done), or we may even ’smell’ some aspect of the concept (so for example, we may say that evidence smelly ‘fishy’). We seem to be equipped not only with a set of functional senses for the gathering of data in the external, physically constructed world, but also with a parallel set of ‘imaginary senses’ which we use to gather data from the internal, metaphorically constructed world.

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Thinking is Perceiving

November 3rd, 2006 Fred McVittie

The contents of thought are not abstract, impressionless concepts, but are perceptions of various kinds. To test this one might simply try to imagine something; an idea, an object, etc and observe the impression it forms in the mind. One cannot imagine the concept chair without imagining a chair, or a sequence of chairs. These impressions are not always, or necessarily, visual; thinking on the concept of music will undoubtedly produce an auditory impression, sugar will entail the impression of a taste, and heat will most likely involve a tactile perception (quite possibly in addition to visual and other components; the sun, a fire, a hotplate; perception is, after all, usually a multimedia presentation). This perceptual nature of thought is also in evidence when we imagine concepts which have no literal or concrete analogue in physical embodied experience. Concepts such as justice, love, and truth, as well as speech components such as in (when used in phrases such as in trouble), or high (as in high performance or high anxiety) are abstract and do not apparently make direct appeal to the senses of perception. In such cases, even though we may not be consciously aware of it, our minds are conceiving of these abstractions through the imaginary perception of metaphors which stand in for these abstract concepts. So our ability to think about justice is due to our ability to form imaginary perception of the various metaphors which represent justice; visual images of scales and balances perhaps, or harmonic sounds, or perhaps other, more ideosyncratic sensory-based perceptions.

Posted in Cognition, Hearing, Imagination, Metaphor, Perception | No Comments »

Drive Shafts of the Mind

November 10th, 2006 Fred McVittie

The relationship between mind and world; res cogitans and res extensa, is articulated through the use of metaphors which allow this connectivity. The most common of these is probably the machine metaphor in which the physical structures of a machine are mapped onto the apparent functioning of the mind. For example, mechanical components link an energy resource (coal, gas, etc) to the use of this energy within a specific application (the wheels of a car, the conveyor belt of a factory, etc). This organisation of physical components and concepts, composed entirely of res extensa, are mapped wholesale onto a wide range of psychological models of mental processing, resulting in metaphorical entities, forces and processes including the notion of the drive or motivation. The fact that these terms are used as if they referred to actual physical structures demonstrates the covert nature of such metaphorical mapping.

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Myth and Theory

November 17th, 2006 Fred McVittie

A myth is a theory of how some aspect of the world works, put overtly into the natural and embodied languages of narrative and image. This is not to say that myth is a poeticised, and therefore less accurate description of the workings of (some parts of the world) compared to other, more ‘rigorous’ theoretical descriptions; only that the metaphorical and embodied nature of myth is overt, whereas in other theoretical forms these qualities and techniques are covert.

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Being There: Presence, Space, Metaphor.

November 21st, 2006 Fred McVittie

Presence, however the term is applied, always assumes the idea of Being There. That is, it combines certain assumptions about the nature of Being, with others assumptions about the concept of Thereness, and supports the intuition that Being is intimately connected to concepts of space. It is impossible to consider Being without adding, soto voce, a Being At, or a Being There.

There is locational and spatial, and the Being There of presence similarly assumes this spatial dimension as a metaphor for its ontology. Presence assumes a geography of space, and in so doing, becomes in thrall to the entailments of this metaphor including boundary, direction, level, extension, separation, relationship, division etc. All of these concepts demand the existence of space, contribute toward the structure of space as a concept, and are meaningless in the absence of space.

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The concept of knowledge

November 30th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Knowledge is not a concrete concept. Whilst it may be the case that many of the facts which we come to know have a concrete, experiential facticity to them the concept of knowledge itself is deeply abstract. Despite the apparent intangibility of knowledge we nevertheless seem able to discuss it, write about it, and render it somehow cognitively available. Following the logic of the above writing, we might conjecture at this point that, if knowledge is not queerer than we can suppose then we must be using certain strategies to effect this supposition, and the most likely strategy is that of using conceptual metaphor, or more specifically conceptual image schema. Knowledge as an abstract idea is rendered negotiable through the use of largely unconscious embodied metaphorical schema, the entailments of which organize our understanding of knowledge and make it sensible.

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Elephant Knowledge

December 23rd, 2006 Fred McVittie


The parable of the blind men and the elephant tells us something about the partiality of knowledge; that only having access to local information does not give us the ‘big picture’. It also suggests that our sense of touch (feeling) is individual and separate, whilst our visual sense is communal. So it is that our feelings, metaphorically mapped from our sense of touch, and the emotional knowledge that these feelings represent, separates us. Our visual sense, and the objectified knowledge it gives character to, brings us together. It is also noteworthy that the men in the story are blind, and therefore would have to take the reality of the big picture on faith.

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Combinatory Schema and Embodied Metaphor

December 27th, 2006 Fred McVittie

Complex behaviour often entails the mobilisation of a number of physical schema simultaneously, as for example when one is walking and juggling at the same time, or, more commonly, when one is talking and also physically displaying emotion through smiling, crying etc. The combination of such schema, which may be seen as complementary or competing, contributes to the overall performance which is taking place. On a cognitive level, this combination suggests that several ‘gists’ (fuzzy traces, scripts, schemata etc) are also in operation simultaneously, all of which are constructed through metaphor.

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The Poetic Imagination

March 23rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The functioning of the mind as described by the theories of Embodied Cognition are radically different from that associated with more blandly ‘computational’ models. The idea that cognition is merely, or even only, the wielding of symbols and the arithmetic calculation of weightings across connectionist networks is replaced by a view that looks out across the mind as a landscape of poetic imagination, not dissimilar to that explored by Bachelard in ‘The Poetics of Space’ and other works. The structure of thought, even the most banal or apparently rational, is underpinned by the methods of poetry and art; metaphor, metonymy, and synecdoche are essential elements in the grammar of cognition.

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Sacred and Profane

May 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The percentage of the material world that we can access directly with our senses is extremely small. Our eyes detect only those wavelengths of light which correspond to the visual spectrum, our ears only hear a narrow range of sounds, our hands can only discriminate the shape, size, and texture of objects within our reach, and then only within strict limits. In addition to these physical limitations of the senses, we are also out of direct contact with most of the things we think about and talk about. Not only can we not touch or taste atoms and galaxies, but we will also never have direct experience of such concepts as politics, God, justice, evil, and tomorrow. These familiar ideas have no sensory representatives and make no impact on our experiences, even love and the other emotions are outside the reach of our senses, (although their effects may not be.)

We are in the strange position therefore of having a constant waking awareness that most of what we think about, most of what we would regard as important to us, is not directly accessible and can only be spoken about using metaphors and analogies. So for example, as Samuel Beckett noted, we can only talk about God by talking about him as if he were a man (or a woman, or a light, or a force, etc.) In a sense we are still the prisoners shackled in Plato’s cave watching the dancing shadows on the wall, and whilst we may have full knowledge that these are merely shadows, we do not have the faculties to see the origins of these shadows, and in fact can only even think about our predicament by using terms such as ’seeing’, ‘in a sense’, and ‘full knowledge’. To paraphrase Beckett, we can only talk about knowing as if it was seeing, we can only think about knowledge by understanding it as a space which can be full.

There is, therefore, a vast netherworld of ideas and concepts which are beyond the horizon of our experience, and which we can never access literally. This is not to say that the land beyond this horizon does not exist, or that it is not real; we can be reasonably sure that there are such things as atoms even though no-one has ever seen one (the jury is still out on the existence of God). The reality of those phenomena which are outside sensory range may be confirmed by other means; through social processes of reality construction for example, or the formulation of theories, ideologies, religious beliefs, and cosmologies.

Our attitude toward these concepts varies enormously. To many people, scientific theories which posit the existence of entities outside of experience, whether this be superstrings, black holes, or dark energy, are approached with an attitude we might call ‘profane’ in the sense that, whilst these theories may be difficult or counter-intuitive, they are part of an approach to knowledge which is apparently materialistic and ‘of this world’. When extra-experiential concepts are referred to which are not framed scientifically, particularly religious or ’spiritual’ ideas, the attitude taken toward these concepts is not profane but is ’sacred’. These is a sense of reverence or even supplication toward the ideas. A distinction is felt between these two approaches, the sacred and the profane, in which the sacred attitude is reserved for certain concepts which lie outside of experience but not others. This is inconsistent, and in my opinion emerges from a false distinction between those aspects of the world we can access and those we cannot. If there was a clear correspondence between the profane and the accessible, and between the extrasensory and the spiritual this would at least be consistent, but no such correspondence exists. The sacred and profane do not map onto the literal and the metaphorical. In my opinion, both the literal and the metaphorical, the accessible and the inaccessible, are equally worthy of both sacred and profane regard.

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The Mind and the Printing Press

May 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

David Hubel in ‘Mind, Brain and Vision’ remarks that the brain is a machine “that does tasks in a way that is consonant with the laws of physics, an object that we can understand in the same way that we understand a printing press”. This ambition for the understanding of the brain may be hubristic however. It is likely that the brain functions using processes which require forms of understanding which are radically different than those we use to understand the mechanical objects of the material world. A printing press is, as Dawkins might put it, a ‘medium sized object moving at medium speed’, its workings are entirely explicable in terms of Newtonian physics and basic mechanics (those workings which are significant to its major function at any rate). A brain on the other hand utilises electrochemical and biochemical, and possibly quantum mechanical processes which are completely beyond the reach of Newtonian physics and which can only be approached using very different mathematical and scientific models. This distinction is significant because, as medium sized object ourselves, we can think and talk about processes which operate on the Newtonian scale literally and directly, but when we think and talk about processes which lie outside of that scale we enter a world outside direct experience which we can only address metaphorically (including the ultimately metaphorical constructions of mathematics). This means that, whilst we might one day fully ‘understand’ the brain, we will never understand it in the way that we understand the printing press.

Paradoxically, there is also an implication that, since we have the minds of medium sized objects, built out of the need to solve the problems facing medium sized objects, those minds are themselves, in a sense, medium sized objects. Our minds intuitively understand something approximating Newtonian physics. There is therefore a grain of truth in what Hubel says although it is more appropriately aimed at the mind, not the brain. The mind does tasks in a way which is consonant with the laws of (folk) physics”.

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Proximity, Sense, and Knowledge

May 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

According to embodied theories of cognition the dominant strategy for the apprehension of abstract concepts is through the widespread and largely unconscious application of metaphor, such that we understand abstract concepts in terms of more concrete concepts.

(W)e tend to structure the less concrete and inherently vaguer concepts (like those for emotions) in terms of more concrete concepts, which are more clearly delineated in our experience. {Lakoff, 1981. p. 112}

Lakoff and Johnson go on to argue that three natural kinds of experience, of the body, of the physical environment, and of the culture, are the basic source domains upon which metaphors draw. All of these source domains are apprehensible directly through the senses.

The concrete sensorial experience that we have of the world is therefore used metaphorically in the formation of concepts. However, the type of information we receive through the various sensory channels, eyes, ears, the surface of the skin, is not equal, and the use we make of this different information depends upon the sensory mode through which it is mediated.

The sensation of seeing is very different to that of hearing, and differs again from that of touching. It is inevitable then, that knowledge understood through the use of metaphors which derive from these different sensory origins will tend to exhibit differences, and also that these differences will be consistent. All concepts which derive from sight-based metaphors should have features in common which distinguish them from concepts formed from touch-based metaphors. I will show here that these consistent differences reveal themselves in language, in gesture, and in their status within interpersonal discourse.

In order to examine the ontology of the metaphors that we use to form abstract concepts, we need to clearly identify the nature of the sensory mode from which they originate. This means reminding ourselves of some obvious facts about the nature of experience as it is mediated by sight as opposed to its mediation by touch for example. Events which stimulate the visual sense, i.e. things that we see, are obviously outside of our body, possibly even a considerable distance from our body, and therefore do not have a direct ‘impact’ on our wellbeing. Visualised objects are also usually also visible to other people, existing in interpersonal shared space, which means that objects apprehended visually are likely to have similar significance for all viewers (seeing a tiger is likely to cause anyone in visible range to run away).

Objects and events which are apprehended through the sense of touch, on the other hand (sic) do, by definition, have a direct impact on the body doing the touching, they are in extreme proximity to that body, and are likely to have a much greater significance for the person touched than for someone else who is not in contact with the object, (touching a flame causes a significantly different response than seeing one).

These completely embodied ontological differences suggests that there is a structured and organised variation in experience depending upon which sense is primarily used to access that experience. The difference in sensory mode maps onto corresponding differences in the proximity of the stimulus to the body, and to the degree to which an experience is shared amongst a number of experiencers. Vision identifies objects which are at a remove from the body, and which are accessible to a number of viewers. Touch identifies phenomena which are up-close and personal.

Given that, as noted above, we draw substantially on embodied experience to organise and structure our knowledge of those aspects of the world which are abstract through the use of conceptual metaphor it is likely that abstract concepts will also be organised according to the various sensory modes. Even a cursory inspection reveals that we do indeed find this distinction, with concepts which we regard as ‘objective’ being referred to using visual metaphor, thus placing them in a shared conceptual space where they appear similar to all (metaphorical) viewers, much as we might place a physical object on public display. Conversely, those entities we regard as ’subjective’ are often referred to using tactile metaphors. These subjective entities are held metaphorically against the body where they are ‘felt’, an individual experience with an acknowledged difference in impact for the ‘feeler’ than for the objective ‘viewer’. Held at such close proximity, tactile concepts are not separated and distanced from the body of the person, they are almost part of that subjectivity, part of the subject.

Visual knowledge contains within its logic the binary opposition of self and other, subject and object, observer and observed. Tactile knowledge elides this distinction into a point of contact in which the space between these supposed binaries is collapsed. Indeed, with some constructions of knowledge, the metaphorical sensory impression that the concept makes on the body penetrates beneath the level of the skin and into the interior, where it engages not only sensorially, but sensually and sexually. This approach to knowledge is found in the ecriture feminine of Cixous and others, the goal of which is to create a language with an interior “to get inside of,” a place of feminine jouissance.

In making art we are constantly traversing the space between the objective and the subjective; stepping back from it so that we might get an ‘overview’ of it, then embracing it and letting ourselves feel it and feel with it. It is both outside us and inside us and the language we use reflect this oscillation, this switching of sensory channels.

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Come into the light

May 22nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The metaphors we use to articulate abstract concepts draw most extensively from those type of concrete experiences which are most common. In terms of the sensory mode in which such experiences present themselves the most prevalent type of experience is visual. With up to 40% of the brain’s processing power being taken up with dealing with visual information it is not surprising that visual metaphors are the most frequently used, (although sensorimotor metaphors are not far behind, for possible explanations of this see Noe, Regan).

Our extensive use of visual metaphor to conceptualise abstract ideas causes an interesting phenomenon when this conceptualisation reflects back upon itself. Given that thought and the making of concepts are themselves deeply abstract activities we can inevitably only comprehend and articulate such concepts through metaphor. In other words, we can only think about thinking metaphorically. When searching for a metaphor which indicates this self-referential thinking, and remembering that most metaphors are visual, we should expect this metaphor (or meta-metaphor) to convey something of the circumstances of visuality. If KNOWING IS SEEING, and we want to talk about the properties of KNOWING, then we should find ourselves talking about the properties of SEEING. When talking about knowledge we should expect people to use terms related to sight and the conditions which make sight possible. Again this is exactly what we find. Knowledge metaphors make much use of visual concepts and terminology: we say ‘I see’ when we mean ‘I know’ etc. Also, a basic condition for the operation of sight is the presence of light and once again there is a close correspondence in language and thought between knowledge and light. In concrete terms light allows us to experience visual space. In metaphorical terms light allows us to comprehend conceptual space.

Interestingly, when we want to refer to extreme forms of knowing, as we might when we are looking for some kind of spiritual or religious knowledge, the metaphor of light is extended, intensified, and sometimes personified such that the all-encompassing knowledge which passes all understanding is conceived of as a divine light.

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Metaphor and Imagination

May 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Metaphor is the imagination of the imagination

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Embodied Dreaming

May 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The conscious thoughts and experiences we have when waking are always accompanied by rich layers of non-concious cognitive activity. This ranges from simple monitoring and maintenance activities: keeping the heart pumping, regulating body temperature etc, to complex pre-conscious and unconscious mentation(in the psycho-analytic sense. These more complex layers of cognitive activity underpin the fully conscious and occasionally rational thoughts we equate with ‘awareness’ or ‘consciousness’, and without these supporting processes consciousness and awareness would not be possible. Normally these processes are not accessible to us, much as the beating of our heart is not normally something we can be aware of, however, there are times when the noises of the body and the world are muted or stilled, and the sound of our heart erupts into our consciousness; when we are afraid, or in love, or running. Similarly, there are times when the blaring of consciousness is turned off and the quiet running of the subterranean rivers of non-conscious cognition becomes audible. One of these times is in the dead of night and the stillness of REM sleep. When we dream we have direct access to the conceptual layer of our cognition. And what we find is that the language of this layer is not abstract, symbolic, and computational, but concrete, embodied, and metaphorical. Our dreams show us the mechanisms of our thoughts.

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Wallas and Wordsworth

May 28th, 2007 Fred McVittie

William Wordsworth in the introduction to the second edition of Lyrical Ballads in 1802 described poetry as ‘the spontaneous outflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origins from emotion recollected in tranquillity’. This remark, often held to be an example of the Romanticism which dominated much (English) poetry of the period, also suggests that poetry, as a creative act (perhaps the creative act) requires the poet to move through a series of psychological stages. Also the mention of a ’spontaneous outflow’ points toward a model of creative production which is hydraulic or pneumatic, involving some metaphorical substance that is accumulating within the mind of the poet, a mind possibly limited in capacity. The limited capacity of the mind causes the substance to be compressed and alchemically transformed into its most dense state and the eventual inevitable result of this continued accumulation is the overflowing or bursting forth of this transformed substance. The mechanism by which this accumulation and transformation takes place has a number of stages. ‘Emotion recollected in tranquility’ points to two of these stages. The ‘emotion’ stage is one in which one is immersed in the experience that is the source of the poem, it might be considered a ‘preparatory’ stage or even a period of ‘research’ (although this term suggests an emotionally-disconnected activity this is not an accurate conception of research, or indeed of any form of experiential cognition. See Damasio 2005). The ‘emotion’ stage is when the object of study is given over to the senses, it is when one metaphorically runs one’s hands over the experience, gathering subtle feelings and sensations. This is followed by a period in which one is separated from the experience, the phrase ‘recollected in tranquility’ suggests a period of calm, in which the poet is not directly involved in the conscious exploration or examination of the experience, but that other, non-conscious cognitive processes are active. It is during this period presumably that the ’substance’ circulating in the mind of the poet undergoes processes of accretion and accumulation, compression and condensation, such that it eventually overflows the container of the mind. At this point the third stage in the poetic process is entered in which the tranquility is replaced by a mental state corresponding to the bursting forth of this ’spontaneous outflow’ .

These stages show some correspondence to the stages of the creative process identified by Wallas (1923) and others since. These are the phases of Preparation, Incubation, Illumination, and Elaboration. Whereas Wallas uses the metaphor of light to relate this process, Wordsworth uses a metaphor of liquid. For Wallas, the moment of creative insight when the poet witnesses the emergence of the creative artifact into his own consciousness is seen as the sudden switching on of a light (Illumination). For Wordsworth this moment is the equally sudden breaking of a dam and the flooding of the stage of consciousness with the liquid of creativity.

Posted in Alchemy, Creativity, Damasio, Antonio, Emotion, Liquid, Metaphor, Transformation, Wallas, Graham, Wordsworth, William | No Comments »

Solaris to Earth (over)

May 28th, 2007 Fred McVittie

It has been estimated that between 75 and 90% of spoken and written language in not literal and concrete, referring to primary experiences with the material substances of the world, but is ‘metaphorical’. It is further believed that this use of metaphor in language reflects a similar widespread use of metaphor in thought, and that most of the cognition we engage in, both conscious and non-conscious, is non-literal. Metaphor allows us to think about aspects of lived experience which would otherwise be unavailable to the senses and therefore unthinkable. These include entities and forces which are simply beyond the reach of the senses because they are too small, too fast, too large, too distant etc. but also includes the many abstract concepts that have been created by human culture and cognition including ‘justice’, ‘truth’, ‘romantic love’ etc. Even such apparently literal and concrete phenomena such as our understanding of numbers has been shown not to be direct (at least above very small numbers), but grounded in metaphor. This dominance of both conscious and non-conscious cognition by metaphor is so great that an entity, person, animal, or artificial intelligence which was only able to process information directly and had no means of embodying abstractions through metaphor would barely qualify as the possessor of a mind at all. It is almost true to say that our modern concept of mind itself is as a kind of metaphor machine.

Our relation to the metaphorising processes which constitute cognition and the formation of mind range from unquestioning acceptance to more self-conscious awareness that we are not thinking or speaking literally. When we speak about atoms we feel that the language is concrete (except to a physicist who knows the truth about atoms), whereas when we speak about God we are not quite so sure if we are talking literally or metaphorically. An uncertainty that will also vary depending on our religious preferences.

Given the ubiquitous concerns with abstractions that seems to characterise the being of human, it is fair to say that most of our phenomenology, and most personal thought and interpersonal discourse is metaphorical. For the most part we live cognitively in a world which is not directly available to the senses, which is beyond human bodily experience. Instead we live in a world of shifting metaphors in which abstract ideas mould themselves into shapes of objects, spaces, and forces that we can see with our minds eye, touch with the mental feelings, move through with the body in our minds. These transient thought forms dissolve and combine, blending and elaborating into complex architectures of thought as our attempts to grasp the ungraspable lead us to constantly build and rebuild these mental structures using the blueprints of embodied experience.

This shifting internal landscape of embodied metaphor, call it ‘imagination’, is the ground for what we experience daily as normal waking consciousness. Behind the clear and constant solidity of waking awareness there is this ongoing dream populated by shape-shifters and transformers. Our consciousness lives on Earth, our imagination lives on Solaris.

Posted in Cognition, Consciousness, Embodiment, Grasp, Imagination, Lem, Stanislaw, Metaphor | No Comments »

The Newtonian Imagination

May 28th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The mechanistic paradigm devised by Newton and Descartes, and refined by Locke, Le Mettier etc. represents the final stage in the development of a truly ‘embodiable’ body of knowledge (sic). By virtue of the paradigm being limited to the the mechanical interactions of medium sized objects moving at medium speed, its area of of explanation corresponds to that which falls within the horizon of direct human experience. The fact that the model was used to explain phenomena which would later be more effectively explained by theories lying beyond the reach of human embodiment: electricity, chemistry, particle physics, astrophysics etc. does not diminish the achievements of scientists working in and advancing an understanding of the mechanistic paradigm. Rather it is more useful to recognise that one of the properties of the mechanistic paradigm is that it not only explains much of the workings of the human-sized world, but also that it describes what (metaphorical, imaginary) cognitive structures we need to create in order to think about elements of the cosmos which lie beyond the horizon of the senses. In other words, our minds are adapted to solve only those problems which apply to medium-sized objects moving at medium speed, and which are directly apprehensible to the senses. All of the problems that we are adaptively enable to detect and deal with fit within the mechanistic Newtonian/Cartesian paradigm. When we address problems or create theories which appear to lie outside of the mechanistic paradigm, we do to through the use of embodiable, Newtonian metaphor.

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Anti-Epiphany

May 30th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The shifting internal landscape of metaphors and representations that we might call ‘imagination’ includes not only the extensive covert metaphors underpinning routine language and thought as described by Lakoff et al, but also the heightened and more recognisable metaphors found in poetic flourishes, scientific theories, political models, and theological beliefs and cosmologies. All of these constructs are beyond literal embodiment so are fabricated in our imaginations from the building materials of embodied experience. Some might argue that such entities as God, Quarks, and the Invisible Hand of the Free Market are objectively verifiable facts about the world, but such claims, however valid, does not alter the status of these entities as ultimately imaginary and metaphorical. Whilst these overt or ‘heightened’ metaphors actually have the same ontological status as the more routine metaphors, we tend regard these abstractions as deserving of special treatment. We treat poetic metaphor with an aesthetic appreciation that is largely absent from our experience of routine embodied metaphor. We approach political metaphor with revolutionary zeal or protectionist paranoia, and we treat theological metaphor with the reverence and awe we call ’spirituality’.

This ’spiritualisation’ of the imagination, in which we associate a particular attitude and mental state with a certain set of abstraction, amongst the sea of abstractions that surrounds us, is slightly odd. The oddness is that we spend most of our lives in the close embrace of one metaphor or another, completely immersed in the spirit world of embodied abstractions and yet we choose this particular subset of metaphors to have a ‘religious’ relationship with. It would perhaps be more consistent to develop this special kind of relationship with those parts of experience which are unlike the others, and which are distinguished by their rarity and ontological distinction. What is exceedingly rare as a category of human conceptualisation, and which in some ways makes more sense as a location for religious experience, is the unalloyed engagement with the material world, a direct experience of physical material, accessed via the senses. Given the human predeliction for metaphorical thought, such moments of engagement with the raw material of metaphor, physical experience itself, are inordinately difficult to sustain. Listening without putting a name or an interpretation on what is heard. Seeing and trusting the evidences of one’s eye. Feeling the texture of the paper under one’s fingertips. These things are not the epiphanies of spiritual experience but the anti-epiphanies of embodiment, which are far less commonplace.

It is perhaps significant that some practical philosophical traditions stress the importance of this kind of concrete experience; these moments of anti-epiphany are islands of holy materialism in an ocean of tumbling tumultuous metaphors, gleaming crystals of divine contact in a volatile and wholly spiritual world.

Posted in Cognition, Enlightenment, Metaphor, Science, Spirituality | No Comments »

Human Programming (top down approaches)

June 2nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

  • The language of ‘top-down’ programming (in the context of human action) is the language of embodied action, communicated through metaphor.
  • Top-down programmes may take the form of analogies, beliefs, theories, or imaginary structures.
  • Top-down programming may serve to organise a complex series of actions, such as performing a dance like the twist, or it may organise the nuances of an action such that the action is performed more optimally, or it may organise cognitive behaviour such that certain mental states are produced or optimised.

Posted in Computation, Embodiment, Metaphor | No Comments »

From Apples to Planets

June 3rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The incorporation of theory such that it turns from speculation into common sense is also a process whereby metaphorical fiction becomes metaphorical fact. Given that all abstract concepts are only conceivable through metaphor and the embodied imagination, this transformation from speculation to incorporation does not involve a shift in the ontology of the information, but in its entanglement with the larger structures of previously existing embodied knowledge.

An example of this process may be the changing status of the ‘theory’ of gravitation since it was first described in reasonably modern form by Newton in the 17th Century. Included within the Principia as a convenient way of talking about the observed relationship between large objects, Gravity, as Newton introduced it, was seen primarily as a ‘force’, and indeed this is still the way it is commonly considered today. As a force, gravity takes its meaning from the embodied experiences of pushing and pulling material objects around. Force has a muscular meaningfulness which is fully incorporated, in the most literal sense of the word, into our day to day experience. Our experience of physical force preceded consciousness and that experience is built into the development of consciousness at the most fundamental level. Force, as a physical fact, we completely understand. When we apply the term ‘force’ to gravity, as we routinely do since Newton, we are using the deep understanding of physical force as a metaphor for an abstract concept. Newton himself, however, did not conceive of gravity in this way; for him, gravity was simply the name that he gave to the purely mathematical relationships governing falling or orbiting bodies, from apples to planets. Several of his contemporaries did take his concept literally and assumed that he was positing such a force, a notion which, at the time, was considered absurd and anti-scientific. This putative force could cause ‘action at a distance’, movement without physical contact or detectable radiation, and was therefore not a scientifically credible concept at all. At that time, science strived for physical and material explanation and the supposed ‘force’ of gravity smacked of the occult. The fact that the idea of gravity as a force did not disappear from the language of science, and is still around in the popular imagination today demonstrates that what began as a convenient fiction used to prop up certain mathematical findings transmuted into something approaching a fact. This transformation or actualisation is not due to new understandings about gravity, new ways of detecting it, controlling it, or producing it. Rather, the change that has resulted in the ‘fact’ of a gravitational force is the gradual integration of the fiction into the wider metaphorical structure of scientific and popular knowledge. Specifically, the metaphor that gravity is a force is now incorporated into a large number of other scientific theories including those related to astrophysics, aeronautics, geology etc etc. The overall metaphorical and imaginary structure of science, honed and pruned by the scientific method to ensure coherence and consistency, now contains the fact of the force of gravity.

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Dark Light

June 3rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The ‘projective’ model of vision in which the act of seeing involves the radiation of a beam from the eyes, was common to the Greeks and featured in Medieval texts on optics. This understanding of vision has largely been replaced with a more passive or relational account, in which the light reflected of the objects of the world enters our eye and contributes to sight rather than any light emerging from the eye. However, the idea of there being some kind of ray or light beam emitted by the organs of sight still has a place in the popular and scientific imagination.

A common metaphor for attention is that of the spotlight, in which it is conceptualised that when we look around at the world the light of our conscious awareness seems to fall on the objects of the world, calling them to attention. (See Fernandez-Duque, D. and M. L. Johnson: 1999). Evidently, regardless of its status outside of physical science, the ’spotlight’ of attention still has currency and meaningful value in the phenomenology of consciousness. An additional possible use of the spotlight metaphor, or rather an entailment of the metaphor which has not yet been exploited, is the application of the spotlight metaphor to an understanding of time. When we cast the light of our attention around the room we are illuminating space with that light, but we might also consider that, in some respects, we are also illuminating time.

When we walk in the dark carrying a torch to help us find our way, the light of the torch illuminates the path directly ahead; we can see the path, and the lower branches of the trees that overshadow it. We can see the bend in the path coming up. But the light of our torch is limited and can only penetrate the darkness a few yards ahead of our feet. We can see the way the path will support our next few steps, but beyond that it grows indistinct. We assume the path continues in a reasonably straight line beyond the haze limits of our illuminated sight, but we cannot be sure. There may be a fork in the road ahead, or the path may end suddenly, or the darkness may conceal an infinity of emptiness and potentiality. Maybe we are not moving forward at all. Maybe the darkness up ahead is actually moving towards us. Maybe our torch is not picking out selective details from the background of the night, but what we are witnessing is the constant congealing of the darkness into the solidity of the path and the lower branches of the trees. Maybe the bright light of our torch is not illuminating the world before us but in actuality we are witnessing the dark light of the past fuse into the singularity of the present.

Posted in Attention, Light, Metaphor, Seeing | No Comments »

Eyes Open, Mind Shut

June 5th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Recent neurological studies of hospital patients who are in the Persistant Vegetative State (PVS), either as a result of brain injury or oxygen deprivation, has provided interesting information related to the study of consciousness (Laurys, 2007). In PVS and related states the patients are often apparently ‘awake’, with eyes open, yet do not show any signs of a conscious awareness of their surroundings. In other words, while there seems to be an ‘awareness’ present, this awareness does not have any contents; the consciousness of these people is illuminated but its light is not falling on anything, it is simply an empty light. This finding gives support to theories which propose a distinction between consciousness and the contents of that consciousness, contradicting models of the mind which propose that to be conscious is to be conscious of something. If these neurological studies are confirmed, then consciousness begins to acquire scientifically supported structure. It consists of at least two components, consciousness, which is the undirected metaphorical light, and what we might call awareness, which is the sense of that light falling on the objects of the world, or on the objects of thought. We might consider how these two components relate to various states of being when they are combined in different ways.


Laureys, Steven. (2007) Eyes Open, Brain Shut. Scientific American. May 2007 issue

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Computational Metaphors of Consciousness

June 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

If the cognitive processes of the mind can be thought of as a kind of computer, then they would constitute a multi-tasking, holographic, qubit-wielding distributed array. If the conscious part of the mind were a monitor attached to this computer, it would be a 15″ black & white with a resolution of 480X640 (and with a dodgy lead).

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The Hard Problem and Metaphors of Mind

June 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The hard problem in consciousness studies is to construct a phenomenologically satisfying account of the relationship between the physical activity of the brain/body, and the subjective experience which corresponds to this activity. It is clear that all experience is supervenient on some physical action; there can be no change in the mind without some change taking place in the substrate of the brain, however, despite the robustness of this observed relationship, and its manifestation in research into the ‘neural correlates of consciousness’, many of us still think that this observation cannot lead to a conclusion which will ‘feel right’. The correlations, if they are found, seem to be different to other correlations that we do find ourselves happy with: the correlation between light and heat for example. This seems intuitively obvious and seems to require no further explanation. Similarly, the observed correlation between the size of an object and its weight, which even when proved incorrect, still appeals to our intuition in ways which seem satisfactory. The correlation between a change in some physical material and a change in our consciousness however, seems very difficult to grasp in this intuitive way, and the fact that this physical material is inside our head seems to make little difference to the difficulty.

One possible reason for the difficulty in forging such a felt connection may lie in the understandings that we have of consciousness, and the unconscious metaphors which are mobilised when we conceive of what a ‘mind’ is.

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Energy in Metaphorland

July 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie

The landscape of metaphor through which our thoughts move is a shifting, unstable terrain, with its own laws and properties different to the real world of lived experience. In some ways Metaphorland is simpler; there is no quantum uncertainty or relativity effects, no dark matter or eleven dimensional superstrings, all that is there is Newtonian and embodiable, everything is medium sized and everything moves at medium speed. In other ways Metaphorland is truly alien however. The constancies and solidity of the real world are absent here, and the objects mix and move, roiling and turning like the currents of the ocean.

Some entities here have particular status, and the nature of these objects, and of their particularly shape-shifting abilities, is significant. One such entity is that which we refer to as ‘energy’. Energy as it exists in Metaphorland has no corrolate in the real world, where it refers simply to a set of relations. In the real world you can’t touch, taste, smell, or hear energy, but here where metaphors live it has a very real existence and that existence is completely available to the metaphorical sense. In fact energy in Metaphorland has two forms of existence, and the exchange between these forms is a key currency here. These two forms can be understood as ENERGY IS FORCE and ENERGY IS SUBSTANCE. When it is a substance it flows from one place to another, sometimes moving sluggishly and almost congealing to a solid, at other times turning volatile like superfluid Helium. As a substance we can hold it in our hands and contain it in vessels and pipes. We can swap it for other entities and use it to move our machines and printing presses. When energy is a force we feel it against the surface of our skin and altering our balance, urging us in one direction or another. It pushes us around and pushes around the other objects of the metaphorical world.

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Metaphorical Action and Character Development

July 2nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

There is an exercise taught in Philippe Gaulier’s mime school in Paris in which the participants line up against a wall and the workshop leader throws tennis balls at them. Inevitably those assailed by the balls attempt to protect themselves, throwing up their arms, cowering, covering their faces etc. At a certain point an instruction is given to ‘freeze’ and the participants must remain in whatever posture they have adopted during the onslaught. The instruction is then given to ‘feel’ the position that has been taken up: to note the position of arms, hands, fingers, and torso: to monitor the expression the face has taken up: to experience the tensions that have accumulated in muscles across the body. Once this internal observation has been carried out the instruction is to maintain this overall composition of the body but to begin to move it about: to walk around and try making gestures: possibly even to speak whilst maintaining this overall body gestalt. From this beginning exercise, (usually comedy) characters are then developed.

What is interesting about this exercise is that is uses a simple physical action, the defending of oneself against a projectile, to ultimately construct a complex character, including the movement style and voice of that character, and it is worth considering how this process is functioning.

The construction of a dramatic character, even the most simple stereotype, is a multivalent activity, with many variables that must be considered and mastered for an effective result to be maintained. These variables include such telling details as eye-gaze direction, length of pauses in speech, movement of the chest during breathing, angle of the head, etc etc. and although these actions seem small and possibly insignificant, it is the overall effect of such actions which makes the difference between an excellent (or ‘convincing’) performance and one which is merely competent or worse. Obviously, the acquisition of conscious control over all of these minute details is beyond most of us, and such a ‘bottom-up’ approach would be a highly inefficient way of gaining mastery. Most acting techniques, and techniques for improving performances of all kinds, not only within acting, involve other approaches which might be called ‘top-down’.

The exercise noted above, in which the avoiding of tennis balls leads to the creation of character, is an example of a top-down technique. This exercise uses the body’s natural defensive instincts to simultaneously organise a vast collection of psychophysical behaviour. In addition to the movements of hands and arms to protect the face, when such a physical attack takes place there is also an integrated choreography of somatic responses taking in all levels of bodily action from jaw clenching to contraction of the anal sphincter, and utilising most of the affordances of the body. This degree of coordinated response could never be achieved using the bottom-up approach, the shear number of variables, and the relationship between these variables is too vast. Also, the coordination of all these tiny actions is dynamic, shifting moment by moment as the assault continues, but even in this shifting an overall coordination is maintained, the defensive posture is never dropped even while the person moves around. It is this finely tuned, intuitive coordination which is captured in the command to ‘freeze’. At that moment, and during the few seconds following when the participant checks over the position and attitude of their body, they are given access to the gestalt and to the organisation that their bodies have constructed naturally. They are then, hopefully, able to mobilise this gestalt in the conscious playing out of a character and the carrying out of intentional behaviour away from the wall and out of the firing line.

Posted in Exercises, Metaphor, Theatre | No Comments »

Meat Knowing

July 5th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The body knows the world in its experiencing of that world. Knowledge, in embodied terms, is coexistent with experiencing and is therefore inevitably limited to the unalloyed affordances of the body. In this regard, ‘experiential knowledge’ refers to that subset of knowledge which is directly apprehensible to the senses and which is capable of being represented within the sensorimotor system of the body.

It could be argued that, since the mind is also ultimately embodied, in the sense that the conceptual mechanisms of thought are derived from the affordances of the body, then all knowledge is ‘experiential’, sharing a consilient body-based vocabulary of image schema and metaphor. However, there are significant differences between knowledge which is based on the language of experience, call it ‘embodied conceptualisation’, and knowledge which is embodied experience itself. One key difference lies in the necessary consistency which marks embodied experience and which is absent from embodied conceptualisation. Embodied experience involves the active engagement with the physical objects of the world; when learning to operate a lathe for example, one is actively connected to the material reality of the lathe and to the material one is working. The embodied experience or tacit knowledge which this activity produces is dependent upon, and constrained by, the necessary constancy of the lathe and the material. In simple terms, the lathe will not change into a container or into an animal half way through the process. The material one is working with will not usually transform into a liquid or volatalise away into gas the moment the chuck key is tightened on it. That is not the way the real world works, and the embodied knowledge of using a lathe is constrained by this reality.

Embodied conceptualisation, being a form of knowledge which uses the language of embodiment but does not operate in the real world, has no such constraints. When constructing knowledge or communicating knowledge which has no literal physical correlates, knowledge concerning some abstract entity such as justice for example, there is no demand for ontological consistency and no need for the constancy of material properties which mark the real world. When using embodied concepts, in metaphor for example, it is commonplace for the guiding metaphor to shift many times during the course of a single sentence. If we wish to create or share knowledge about justice we may find ourselves alluding to metaphorical swords, scales, blindfolds, etc, and moving between these allusions seamlessly and unproblematically. The ontology and materiality of such a concept is not constrained by the physics of the real world but rather has a fluidity which gives it its power. It has been suggested that the very act of mixing metaphors is a strategy for the advancement of conceptual knowledge, these mixings acting as ‘engines of organisational enquiry’(1).

(I am aware that even in talking about such conceptualisation I am making use of the very capacity under discussion. Most of the above paragraphs have been chains of shifting metaphors employed to organise the enquiry I am engaged in.)

1. Boland, Richard J. Jr. & Tenkasi, Ramkrishnan V.
Metaphor and the Embodied Mind: An Engine of Organizational Inquiry.
SPROUTS: Working Papers on Information Environments, Systems and Organizations
Volume 1 Issue 1 Article 2 – 2001

Posted in Affordance, Boland, Richard J. Jr. & Tenkasi, Ramkrishnan V., Embodiment, Metaphor, Schema | No Comments »

A World Without Cycles

July 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Prior to the invasion of the Conquistadors into South America the local culture, although it was highly advanced in many ways, was a civilisation without the wheel. Actually this is not entirely true, apparently they did have toys which had wheels, and devices such as spinning tops which used the principle of the wheel, but they did not have wheeled vehicles. Let us pretend that they didn’t though. Nor, for the sake of argument, did they have roulette wheels, plate-spinning jugglers, rotating potter’s wheels, lathe’s, or indeed anything which involved the rotation of a circular object. In such a civilisation would it be possible for the concept of a ‘cycle’ to emerge as an organisational structure such as the ‘cycles’ we talk about when discussing history, industrial production, time, etc.? When ‘cycle’ is used in these ways it is a metaphor to indicate some phenomenon which repeats, which involves the constant return of a limited pattern of events, and which ‘comes around’ with the regularity of a turning wheel. Our conception of such phenomena depends upon our previous embodied familiarity with the wheels we come across in everyday life. Presumably without this familiarity and the Image Schema which we possess based on our interaction with the wheel, then this metaphor of the cycle would not be available to us.

Posted in Cycle, History, Metaphor, Schema | No Comments »

Emotional Maths

July 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Imagine you are standing on a tightrope, or if that is too difficult and precarious, imagine standing on a balance beam, four inches wide, three feet above the ground. You have your hands outstretched at each side and you are standing perfectly still. In this position you feel fine: poised, in control, focussed.

Now imagine someone comes along and places two books in the palm of your right hand. These books are not heavy but they do affect your posture and your ability to stand perfectly still. Now your feelings have changed and you no longer feel fine. You feel the precariousness of your position, you feel out of control and anxious. Your poise is under threat. Thankfully, at this moment someone else comes along and places another two books, first one, then another, on the palm of your left hand. Your equilibrium is restored and you feel a wave of positive emotion flowing through you as your control returns and your poise regained.

This type of experience, the fully embodied sensations associated with balance and loss of balance, may form the prototype from which more conceptual notions of balance and equilibrium are drawn. For example, the practice of mathematics, particularly in dealing with formulae and equations, involves a set of parallel operations and may be fueled by similar emotional and somatic responses.

When we are confronted by an equation of the type 1 = 1 we recognise it as ‘balanced’, and whilst we may not consciously feel the same degree of poise and control that we felt on the balance beam we can nevertheless sense the ‘rightness’ of it. We might say that this equation has inherited some of the emotional content of the physical experience it mirrors and we feel fine about it in some small way similar to how we felt as motionless acrobats. When the equation is changed to 1 = 3 however, the sense of rightness disappears and is replaced by the subtle, but nevertheless present, feelings of negativity and ‘wrongness’. Just as maintaining one’s position on the balance beam when one has an uneven distribution of weight is anxiety provoking, so this unbalanced equation conveys the same uneasiness. This felt sense of rightness and wrongness, emerging as it does from a metaphorical mapping of embodied experience onto the abstractions of mathematics, shows that maths, and indeed all abstractions, are rarely free of emotional content. Indeed it is this emotional engagement which is the difference between understanding mathematics and simply wielding symbols according to certain disembodied rules.

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The Physics of Cognition

August 13th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Our ability to experience the physical world is constructed and constrained by a number of laws, roughly corresponding to Newtonian/Cartesian physics. (Only roughly because ‘folk physics’ also plays a part). These physical laws are significant because the represent the organisation and codification of embodied experience. Put another way, these laws represent the physical world as explored and indexed by the instrumentation of the human body and sensorimotor system. (We are reminded here that any data-gathering process or instrument can only ever gather information which interacts with the instrument used in the gathering; approaching the world with a thermometer produces a different understanding of the world than if one approaches it with a geiger counter, or a calorimeter, or a light meter.)

We may, of course, devise experimental techniques and notation systems which allow us to think about phenomena which are outside the zone of human embodiment, but when we do this we inevitably resort to metaphor, effectively thinking about the unembodiable as if it were within our area of understanding. So, for example, we understand electricity by thinking of it as if it were a flow of liquid through the wires, a current. Our experience of the world is organised through an informal physics, the key feature of which is its capacity for embodiment, its availability for expression in the language of sensorimotor activity.

When we consider our ability to conceptualise, to think about our experiences or to imaginatively explore now ideas and situations, we are reliant upon the same sensorimotor language and, largely, the same physics. As noted above, our ability to formulate ideas which appear to be beyond the scope of the sensorimotor depends upon the implementation of conceptual metaphor, however, even though the vocabulary of this sensorimotor language of conceptual metaphor is the same as that applied to embodied physical experience, the grammar is different. We might say that, although the materials of thought are the same as the materials of action, the physics applied to these materials has significant differences as well as similarities.

An evident example that will be familiar to all is the physical property of object permanence. In the physical world one of the most fundamental principles is that an object, a tree say, will continue to exist unless some large force acts upon it. It will not simply vanish without a trace. Moreover, the tree will continue to exist in some form even if it is acted upon by a force. A forest fire will undoubtedly change its nature but this change will be consistent with certain well-known and predictable laws, and much of the tree will be conserved throughout this transformation. In the conceptual realm however, this principle of conservation does not apply, or at least not in anything like the same way. To stay with the example of the tree, we utilise this concept as part of our sensorimotor vocabulary as a metaphor whenever we want to talk about certain abstract concepts. So we say ‘family tree’ when we want to give conceptual form and structure to the abstract concept of ‘family’. We effectively borrow the physical structure of a tree to organise our thoughts about relations which, while they clearly exist, have no tangible qualities. Relationships between family members, being abstract, would be simply ‘unthinkable’ without the metaphor of a tree to provide a structure to our thoughts.

The key difference between this conceptual tree and the ‘real’ tree in the corner of the field that we pass each day when walking our dog is that, while the tree in the field is unlikely to change into anything else, a tree in the mind may well transform radically, or disappear completely. For instance, when thinking and talking about our family we may shift from talking about our ancestors to talking about our genes. If we did this it is quite likely that, in making this apparently simple turn in the conversation, we would move from referring to our family tree to talking about the ‘gene pool’ from which we emerged. What this reveals is that, behind this seemingly trivial moment in the play of our thoughts and language, one massive organising metaphor has suddenly and unremarkably changed shape. The tree that was standing in our minds, with the members of our family perched on its branches has suddenly become a body of water; a lake perhaps, or an ocean, teeming with genetic life.

Posted in Descartes, Rene, Metaphor, Newton, Isaac, Physics | No Comments »

Origins of Spatial Mind

August 18th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The metaphor of MIND IS SPACE may lie in our ability to construct imaginary ‘representations’, or three dimensional maps of the space we occupy. An ability which is probably assisted by the consilient simultaneous mapping produced by the different senses, particularly hearing and proprioception. Many animals seem to be able to carry some kind of map of their local environment in their minds and which gives them information about their location, and an ability to plan and predict actions within that space. It seems a short step from this memory of real space to the subjunctive spaces of prediction and planning, and then to those in which imagination may play a part. Once a space contains imagination there seems no reason to prevent the imaginary from overrunning the space and thereby transforming it from a map of the real to a realm of purely conceptual thought.

  • The real forest becomes a forest in the mind.
  • Traces and fears of monsters in the real forest become traces and fears of monsters in the forest in the mind.
  • The forest in the mind has imaginary monsters behind each branch.
  • The imaginary monsters breed and produce strange and beautiful mutants.
  • The mutants clear part of the forest and build a city.
  • The city contains a library with all the works lost at Alexandria.

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Visual Processing of Information

August 18th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Much information accessed via the senses is processed by the visual centres of the brain, even when the information itself is not primarily visual. For this reason we might speak of the ‘visual processing of information’, rather than simply the ‘processing of visual information’. The latter implies a method of treating data which is neutral with regard to its origin in any particular sensory mode and a distinction in the data itself according to those origins, whereas the former acknowledges that, whatever sensory channel information may arrive from it is essentially of the same type. It is the way of processing this information which renders it ‘visual’ ‘auditory’ etc. (This is confirmed by the experience of synaesthetics). An example of this is when we conceive of temperature as being ‘high’ or ‘low’, in which instance we are treating sensory information which is purely tactile by mapping it onto an imaginary visual space, almost as if we are looking at a graph of temperature or the rising and falling of liquid in a thermometer. It might be said that this is purely a metaphor and is of no relevance to brain science, however, as demonstrated by Lakoff and Johnson, such use of metaphor is the stuff of cognition, not simply the poetic icing on the cake. Metaphors are instantiated in the networks of the brain such that when talking about temperature as being ‘high’ we are effectively utilising visual networks, and it is this supervenient use which underpins the metaphor.

Posted in Johnson, Mark, Lakoff, George, Metaphor, Sense, Space, Supervenience, Synaesthesia | No Comments »

Visual Processing of Information

August 18th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Much information accessed via the senses is processed by the visual centres of the brain, even when the information itself is not primarily visual. For this reason we might speak of the ‘visual processing of information’, rather than simply the ‘processing of visual information’. The latter implies a method of treating data which is neutral with regard to its origin in any particular sensory mode and a distinction in the data itself according to those origins, whereas the former acknowledges that, whatever sensory channel information may arrive from it is essentially of the same type. It is the way of processing this information which renders it ‘visual’ ‘auditory’ etc. (This is confirmed by the experience of synaesthetics). An example of this is when we conceive of temperature as being ‘high’ or ‘low’, in which instance we are treating sensory information which is purely tactile by mapping it onto an imaginary visual space, almost as if we are looking at a graph of temperature or the rising and falling of liquid in a thermometer. It might be said that this is purely a metaphor and is of no relevance to brain science, however, as demonstrated by Lakoff and Johnson, such use of metaphor is the stuff of cognition, not simply the poetic icing on the cake. Metaphors are instantiated in the networks of the brain such that when talking about temperature as being ‘high’ we are effectively utilising visual networks, and it is this supervenient use which underpins the metaphor.

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Conceptual Fog

August 20th, 2007 Fred McVittie

‘Conceptual Fog’ is another term for ‘inappropriate viewing conditions’. All forms of seeing, even the most apparently naïve, transparent, and realist, require the mobilisation of concepts, but some concepts are more conducive to certain forms of seeing than others.

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Between Seeing and Touching

August 20th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Visual objects are distant from us and are located in external space. Felt objects are so close to us as to barely have ‘location’ at all.

Different visual objects (or concepts imagined metaphorically as objects) occupy different spatial locations, and changes in these objects are conceived as changes in location. Different ‘feeling objects’ or simply ‘feelings’ are difficult to dimensionalise spatially and changes in feelings are not conceived as changes in location but as changes in intensity or some other property which is not spatial (colour, temperature, size, luminance etc).

Between feeling and seeing the senses of hearing and olfaction are nested with intermediate orders of spatial extension and specificity. When we hear a sound we can turn in that direction, or point at it with a fair degree of accuracy, but it is likely that there also be a large amount of fuzziness in our pointing. We may know intellectually that sound may be emitted from a point, but our hearing of that sound is more smudged. It is an entity which has blurred boundaries, which does not exist in a single region of space but seems to flow from a region. The main direction of that flowing is toward the listener and the sound fills the space between this loosely defined region over there (and here the listener makes a vague hand-waving gesture indicating the space outside of their body that is particularly full of the sound) and the sound in here (and here the same listener makes a very precise pointing gesture toward the inside of their skull). The sound out there falls away from its source in some event and loses whatever singular identity it ever had (if it ever had any identity at all) forming chords with all the other sounds of the world. With eyes closed I (and you) can hear these chords, and while I can separate them in space I usually don’t. If I separate them at all, and again I usually don’t, I separate them in time, with one chord following another in a neverending sequence of conscious being-in-sound. The spacetime of sound is not the empty, crystal clear space of objectifying vision, but the fullness and vibratory connectedness of a single piano string.

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Substance Metaphors

August 25th, 2007 Fred McVittie

One of the most extensive groups of conceptual metaphors that we use to structure and organise our thoughts about phenomena which would otherwise be incomprehensible and inexpressible is that set of metaphors which use SUBSTANCE as their source. Sometimes the substance used is quite specific, as for example when we talk about the abstract concept of genetic inheritance by using the metaphor of blood. In other instances we use more generic substances to stand for abstract concepts and exploit the general properties of substances to think and talk about concepts about which we would otherwise have to remain mentally and actually silent. A clear example of this latter type of generic substance metaphor is that of the type MIND IS A LIQUID which is explored in detail elsewhere and which shows itself in our use of such terms as flow, absorb, stream of consciousness, oceanic awareness, etc, all of which describe mental states or processes through the application of the one substance metaphor. It is inevitable that our use of such metaphors is based on our vernacular embodied understanding of substances, and not on an understanding of substance which requires specialist, non-embodiable knowledge. There is unlikely to be a metaphor group relating particularly to the halide elements for example, or to substances which form salts in the presence of acids. In other words, the ways in which substances are used as sources for metaphor is not dependent upon technical knowledge, of chemistry for example, but on the experiential knowledge of handling different substances and encountering different substances directly with the sensorimotor system. At this level of analysis, the body is the template for categorisation, not the chromatograph or the tunneling electron microscope. Unsurprising, the primary categories that the body forms are those familiar to all of us from Primary School science class, the categories of solids, liquids, and gases, and it is from this threesome that most of our substance metaphors are drawn. (Please note the inclusion of the caveat ‘most’ in the preceding sentence. I will be arguing that on special occasions we do invent, postulate, or imagine, a fourth state of matter outside of the big three.)

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Rivers and Dams

August 26th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The river of non-conscious (animal) cognition flows along the path of least resistance. The great trick of consciousness begins with an ability to temporarily arrest this flow and make a choice about whether we really want to follow the urging of the landscape and carry on in that direction, always downwards. We feel these moments of choice occasionally as build-ups of pressure or temptation, almost as if the waters of the river that is carrying us along have been dammed and that water is backing up behind us. This arrested flow causes the water behind the dam to form vortices and eddies, turning over itself and becoming chaotically complex loops of current before the ground offers a route that we agree to. Then we let ourselves go and follow the river downstream. A valley carved out not just by the yes of the river but also by the no of the dam.

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The Fourth State of Imaginary Matter

September 12th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Matter, historically, was divided into the intuitively sensible categories of earth, air, fire, and water. To the medieval mind, this division was sufficient to cover the major distinctions in the properties of the stuff of the world, and associated conveniently with other quaternary distinctions, the bodily humours, the platonic solids etc. at a time when such correspondences were seen as significant evidence for the logical organisation of the world. The development of chemistry and physics replaced this intuitively satisfying but practically useless division with the period table of the elements and atomic theory which together reveal much more fundamental relations between substances and allows for vastly greater prediction and control of the chemical universe.

Outside of chemical practice however, we do still tend to use simpler systems of dividing the substances of the world into broad categories, regardless of their chemical constitutions. We do not usually use the earth, air, fire, water, classification but rather tend to think of ’stuff’ as being either solid, liquid, or gas. This trinity covers all of the material experience we are likely to run into in our daily lives, and maps thoroughly onto the sensorium in which we live. (Plasma has occasionally been referred to as the ‘fourth state of matter’ but since it is never encountered outside of high-energy physics it does not feature in our vernacular or intuitive understanding of the material world.)

Obviously, this classification of substance does not describe all aspects of the world, since much of our experience is not substance-based. We routinely engage with such entities as locations, forces, relationships, processes etc. which have no substantive existence but clearly are as real as the matter which we can see and touch. When we are engaging with substances however, we routinely expect it to fall into one of the three categories or solid, liquid, or gas, and if we learned of a substance which was outside of this classification (as opposed to a mixture for example) we would be hard pressed to find a way to conceive of it.

Let us assume for a moment that such a substance exists. We cannot talk about it easily since our language of substances is restricted to the big three, and even thinking about it ties us in knots. The extent to which we can think or talk about it at all is only the extent to which we can say it is like one of the existing known substances. We can say it is ‘a bit like a liquid’ or ’something like a gas’, or ‘ it has some of the qualities of a solid’. Yet even while we do this, we know that we are not really talking about the substance at all, such expressions are ‘a finger pointing at the moon’. This imaginary substance is neither solid, liquid, nor gas, and yet we can use the properties of these substances to speculate what the 4th state of matter might be like. This substance may be neither more solid than solid, nor more gaseous than gas, but at the same time we can think of it being both these things. Inasmuch as solidity and gaseousness seem to define a spectrum, the ’solidity’ spectrum we might say, then we can imaginatively place substance four on this spectrum, and if we do this we find that it is both more solid than solid and more gassy than gas. On the one hand, the fact that it makes no impression on the sense seems to place it beyond a gas. The spectrum of solidity from solid to liquid to gas seems to indicate a gradual dropping off of the availability of the different substances to sensory awareness; we can touch, taste, smell, hold, and see a solid; a liquid may be less visible, less easy to handle and contain; a gas is more evanescent still and may barely register on the senses at all. This journey from solid to gas is one of increasing removal from sensory contact and a hypothetical fourth substance, given that it does not appear at all, if we are to continue with this logic, must inevitably be placed beyond the gaseous.

On the other hand, we could possibly conceive of this substance taking up a position at the other end of the spectrum of solidity. When we look around at the solid matter of the world, we may be impressed by its apparent solidity, but we are also aware of it ultimate impermanence and transience. A Keats put is, ‘things fall apart’, and this goes for the most seemingly permanent. We see the breakdown of bodies, buildings and coastlines and know in our hearts that all things must pass. We also know that the most solid and fixed of matter that we see around us and inside us does not stay in the same place but is in constant motion. From the stars to our own eyeballs, all the stuff of the world is constantly jiggling and shifting. And while this jiggling seems to be most acute with gasses, and is least in evidence with solids, even the largest rocks fly around the Sun at a thousand miles an hour. Surely there should be state of matter does not perform this wild dance, but is genuinely solid; not just hard to the touch but firm and reliable in its fixity. The logic of the gradient from gas to solid, when extrapolated onward, seem to lead to such a substance. Truly permanent, truly unchanging, truly still.

We could, at this point conjecture on the existence of not only a fourth, but also a fifth state of imaginary matter, one which exists outside the ephemerality of gas and another which is inside the glacially shifting surface of solids. It may be more interesting to consider to what extent these apparent opposites can be reconciled into a single substance. And if such conflation proves to be impossibly paradoxical, we may find that we can learn something from the attempt.

Posted in Liquid, Matter, Metaphor, Sense, Substance | No Comments »

The Motion of the Snake

September 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

In the beginning was the snake, and the snake was in every moment of time and all space contained the snake. There was nothing before the snake, for all of time is in the body of the snake, and there will be no end, for the same reason. And the movement of the snake is a circular movement and the appearance of a wheel, but there is, as it were, a wheel within a wheel, and endless wheels within wheels, and all of the turning of the wheels is the motion of the snake.

Posted in Metaphor, Ouroborus, Re-entry, Symbol, Time | No Comments »

The Impossible Blog of Borges

September 15th, 2007 Fred McVittie

There is a blog somewhere on the web in which the entries vary enormously in length, but regardless of the number of words each posting is carefully labelled with keywords; search terms that unite the smallest with the largest. One entry, concerning the nature of presence, has over 1000 words and is captured by the three search terms evolution, neuroscience, metaphor. Here is another entry, consisting only of the quotation from Hermes Trismegistus ‘All is One’, yet the number of search terms which lead to these words, the number of ideas which require this phrase to be included in their orbit, is much greater, numbering over 100.

People say (usually those who have read too much Borges) that there are two entries on the blog which no-one should read; which should never have been written, which should not have been possible to write. The first consists of all possible words in all the languages of the planet, arranged in all the orders which could ever be grammatically correct. It is perfectly coherent, perfectly self-contained. The number of labels attached to this entry is zero; there are no ways into the infinite entry because there is nothing outside it. The other impossible entry consists of no words at all. No concepts, ideas, perceptions, sounds, thoughts, feelings, or attitudes mar the perfect surface of this empty space on the screen, and to read it is to be dissolved. The search terms which lead to this space exceed the limits of the spell-checker, and to collate this list would take longer that there are moments left in history.

These two imaginary and unimaginable entries are the pillars between which all the writing is strung. One pillar is labelled ‘Carbon’, and the other is marked ‘Mathematics’.

Posted in Blog, Borges, Jorge Louis, Mathematics, Metaphor, Neuroscience, Writing | No Comments »

Metaphor and Copenhagen Interpretation

September 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The mathematician JBS Haldane famously observed that ‘the universe may not only be queerer than we think but queerer than we can think’. He intended this observation to apply specifically to the more esoteric aspects of the universe encountered mainly by astronomers and particle physicists, whose equations do indeed describe a world which is inconceivable in any literal sense, and which makes no intuitive appeal to the senses of even the most highly trained. As Richard Feynman put it, ‘if you think you understand quantum mechanics, then you don’t understand quantum mechanics.’

Haldane’s comment finds theoretical support and application within the so-called ‘Copenhagen Interpretation’ of quantum theory introduced by Bohr and Heisenberg. Part of the application of this principle requires an attitude towards that application which recognises the distinctly partial ontological status of such theories. As Robert Anton Wilson colloquially put it, ‘the equations of quantum mechanics do not describe what is happening in the quantum world, but what structures of thought we need to create in order to think about that world’. Recent work done in the field of cognitive linguistics and cognate fields suggests that these ’structures of thought’ are largely built out of embodied metaphors, and it is these metaphors, grounded in concrete sensibilities of the body and the sensorimotor system, which give accessible form and order to the queerest aspect of the universe.

The attitude one must bring to the Copenhagen Interpretation has occasionally been referred to as ‘model agnosticism’: an approach to abstract theoretical constructs such as equations, models, structures etc, which recognises their usefulness whilst simultaneously also recognising their status as ‘man-made’ artifacts, rather than as material facts

Posted in Cognitive Linguistics, Copenhagen Interpretation, Embodiment, Haldane, J.B.S., Metaphor, Science, Wilson, Robert Anton | No Comments »

Enlightenment from Sensory Collapse

September 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Enlightenment (or something like it) can be aided by the process in which visual and auditory sensory experiences are transformed into tactile or proprioceptive experiences. This shift in sensory engagement from the seen to the felt collapses the (conceptual) space which radically separated seer from seen, replacing it with contact. In metaphorical terms this collapse involves a remapping of concepts from sources based in the visual (and auditory) to sources which are located next to, or inside of the body, rather that ‘over there’.

Posted in Enlightenment, Metaphor, Sense, Space | No Comments »

God of the Gaps (in embodied knowledge)

September 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The ‘God of the Gaps’ argument critiques certain approaches to theism on the grounds that, if we use God as an explanation for all those phenomena that we do not understand, then as our understanding increases, inevitably God decreases. Presumably then, the hypothetical end point to such inevitable progression of knowledge would be an epistemological universe in which no space was left in which God might hide. Even if knowledge is never total, as it surely will never be, this understanding of God is still problematic as it presents an image of a deity which is in a state of progressive decline. Every new article of information, from the most robust and powerful scientific theory to the simplest new fact acquired through routine acts of perception constitutes an amputation of the limb of God. For this reason the ‘God of the Gaps’ description of a deity has been roundly criticised as both a failure of the scientific imagination and an insult to the Almighty.

Having said that, a case could be made for a different kind of God of the Gaps, if we understand these gaps not to be in knowledge, but in our ability to conceptual this knowledge in a way was directly embodied.

The extensive work done in the field of Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Embodied Cognition points to the importance of our embodiment in our ability to make sense of ideas and to structure concepts. The outcome of such research suggests that whilst we are easily able to conceptualise concepts which have direct sensory impact (medium sized objects, forces, substances, schema etc) when we wish to think about anything which is beyond the horizon of our bodily experience we have to use indirect methods. Chief among these methods is the systematic and consistent use of metaphor, such that we think of concepts which are abstract in terms of others which are concrete. We commonly think of love for example, as a journey, or of anger as heat in a sealed container. (These examples are from Lakoff and Johnson’s excellent introduction to these ideas ‘Metaphors We Live By’). Outside the relatively narrow domain of direct embodied experience is all the really interesting stuff of science, philosophy, politics, culture, and religion. Most of these practices, it can be demonstrated, are concerned with abstractions, and therefore the currency of their debates is metaphor and imagination.

In terms of science, As Stephen Jones points out in ‘Physics and Metaphor’ many of the most robust and elegant theories of science are understood only through acts of imagination. The concept of the origin of the universe in a Big Bang is one such example of this. Whatever event took place that triggered the subsequent creation of all that we see around us today clearly was not Big and did not go Bang. Yet this image of a kind of explosion is a useful image around which to structure our understanding of something that we simply are not adaptively equipped to understand literally. This does not mean that something that we call the Big Bang didn’t happen, it simply means that we are too stupid to understand it without drawing a picture of it, rather like the scene in Mad Max: Beyond the Thunderdome, where a bunch of post-apocalyptic children try to tell each other what television was using only cargo-cult materials of sticks and leaves. The big difference that makes a difference between Mad Max and Georges Lemaître (an early proponent of the BBT) is that Lemaitre tested his imaginary explosion against the data of other ideas and theories.

This example, of the organised application of imagination to fill a significant gap in embodied knowledge, is typical of the way that science works, and indeed is also typical of the way that non-scientific gaps are filled. When I talk to my kids about what they will do in the future, the question a career often comes up, but if I am honest I have absolutely no idea what a career is. It has no smell, taste, or visible substance, and I can’t hear it or touch it. In fact I have to admit that there is a huge gap in my ability to think literally about their career. This doesn’t seem to stop me thinking about it though, and I do, and the way I do it is through the (largely unconscious) use of metaphor. If I look closely at how I am thinking I would say that I imagine their careers as something like the flight of an arrow, curving gently upward to arrive at a desired target, and I try not to imagine them as careering out of control, like a driverless vehicle, a danger to themselves and passers-by alike. Without some kind of image like this I don’t see how I could conceive of something like ‘a career’ at all.

Which brings me, finally, to the God of the Gaps. Given that much of what we say and think is outside embodiable range, and is therefore in this realm of the metaphorical and the imaginary (up to 90% by some estimates), this means that our thoughts are entirely dominated by the imagination and it is not some freaky little playground in the corner of our brains where only fairies and artists hang out. It also means, at noted earlier, that any idea which is even remotely interesting is probably suffused with imagination, if not constructed of it entirely. If I was a theist, which I am not thank Richard, I would definitely want my God to be at least as wild as the Big Bang, if not more so, which would definitely put Him in imagination territory.
The bottom line with any conceptual metaphor and any imaginary entity yielded by that metaphor is how well it functions. The Big Bang metaphor works really well to cohere data and observations into a single big picture. The flight path of the arrow that (I hope) traces my kids’ career also helps them organise and plan their actions. I am quite happy to believe in an imaginary God; at least to the extent that I believe in the Big Bang or a Career Plan. I can see some potential value in this kind of God of the Gaps, a complex, coherent anthropomorphic metaphor which helps to give form to certain aspects of the universe that are beyond my embodiment. If someone can show me what the function of this particular imaginary entity is, ideally someone who does not misunderstand science and the imagination to such an extent that they insist that God is real, .I’d be happy to consider believing in it, (although I would probably draw the line at worship).

Posted in God, Johnson, Mark, Jones, Stephen, Lakoff, George, Lemaitre, Georges, Metaphor | No Comments »

Knowledge, Substance, Proximity

September 17th, 2007 Fred McVittie

We indicate different types and different status of knowledge using a range of metaphors. One of these is proximity, in which we indicate knowledge which we feel most sure about by conceiving of it as lying close to or in contact with the body, whilst more impersonal, and possibly contested knowledge tends to be conceptualised as remote.

A second gradient of different ways of knowing is that of the different sensory mode through which that knowledge is metaphorically conceived, with ‘felt’ knowledge, drawing on metaphors of touch, having a subjective quality, with the kind of personal certainty which accompanies ‘feelings’. Observed knowledge, using metaphors of sight, lies at the outer end of the spectrum and is seen (sic) as objective and existing apart from the individual body in intersubjective space. The certainties of objectivity are social and interpersonal and may not be ‘felt’ as certainties at all.

These two metaphor sets correlate with one another such that proximal knowledge, lying close to the body, is usually ‘felt’, whereas remote knowledge, separated from the body and located in objective space, is ’seen’. Felt knowing is subjective and seen knowledge is objective.

Posted in Feeling, Knowledge, Metaphor, Seeing, Space | No Comments »

Going Round in Circles

September 25th, 2007 Fred McVittie

At the risk of mixing metaphors, or rather with the gleeful mixing of metaphors, I should say that the material in this blog, in addition to its being arranged in form around the poetics of the conference abstract, can also be thought of as arranged into a number of concentric circles.

The core of the thesis is that which is most directly related to the Research Question and comprises a set of postings which refer to that question. This core material is supported by the usual referencing and bibliographic protocols. This section is written almost entirely in the third person, and strives for (or possibly simulates) the objectivity which is conventional in documents of this kind. These core postings will form the basis for a reflective document I will be writing at some point in the future. In metaphorical terms, this material corresponds to downstream materiality.

Outside of this core material are a set of postings which relate to the relationship between knowledge paradigms and embodied cognition, specifically the extensive use of body-based metaphors within the individual and cultural management of knowledge. This set cannot be read as a single linear argument, but rather exists as a constellation of ideas which form a backdrop to the core thesis, like the night sky regarded by sailors of the 16th Century, as both an aid to navigation and the location of myths and dreams. Here the language is likely to be compressed, sometimes into the form of a conference abstract, sometimes into the other abstractions of poetic and literatary imagery.

Beyond the orbit of these postings there are the whispy and filimentary traces of half-formed concepts and shape-shifting metaphors. Pointing our mental telescopes in their direction shows them as isolated and evanescent phantoms, connected to the Earth only by the sightline of our own looking. There are dead men out there, and angels, my children wake up in the night and have to be lulled to sleep, dogs are barking at nothing and the land is littered with Old Gods and abandoned technologies. We would cast these vague monstrosities adrift but something about them stays our hand. It is as if the tides within us are somehow affected by these remote entities and some part of us, at the heart of our being, moves with them. Here is a picture of the ocean, and we are on that beach looking at a distant sail: there is a dream of a snake burning in the garden of the world.

Posted in Blog, Metaphor, Re-entry | No Comments »

The Blog Ate My Homework

September 27th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The original purpose of this writing was to support my PhD research by acting as a repository for the various wayward ideas, both relevant and irrelevant, that occurred to me during this time. Because of my admiration for the work of the Polish author Stanislaw Lem I chose initially to frame these random thoughts within the conceit of a fictional conference, a space which offers the unusual literary form of the conference abstract.

Abstracts for conferences, from my experience, are often far more engaging than the full papers to which they refer. A well-articulated abstract does not only outline a set of findings or lay out the terms of a new piece of analysis, it also achieves something of the status of an artwork, compressing extensive polyphonal expressions into a single, dense piece of prose. There is something engagingly aleatory about such writing, it shows us the swings and roundabouts of conceptualisation and invites us to play on these for a while, before the more formal fencing off of that area that will take place during the full exposition of the paper. Metaphorical images and performances flow and strut across the paragraphs with an unfettered air of poetic freedom that is often suppressed in the more extensive discursions.

Although I abandoned this conceit quite early on in the process of this writing, the status of the conference abstract is nevertheless relevant to how the rest of this writing is working, for me at least. The conference abstract, like the abstract in art or of some poetry, is poised between two different poles of knowing and being. On the one hand is the apparently transparent revealing of the full paper, representational and photographic in its claim for truth, realism, and authenticity. Here is knowledge in the public domain, fully visible, fully referenced, and solid as a rock or a book. This is the direction in which the abstract leans and toward which it directs our gaze. On the other hand is the performance, the experiment, the experience, and the moment of coming-into-being which precedes the abstract. It is ephemeral, artistic, and phenomenal and is upstream from all writing; we are carried swiftly on, the illumination casts shadows on the page, the video of the performance misses the moment when the dancer’s foot is at just this angle. It is ultimately irrecoverable.

The writings in this blog traverse this odd liminal space of the conference abstract, sometimes reaching forward into the objective space ahead and touching the material of facts and shared knowledge, sometimes falling toward the point of origin and the moment of performance.

Posted in Blog, Knowledge, Lem, Stanislaw, Metaphor | No Comments »

Beside a River near Lyon

October 1st, 2007 Fred McVittie

You are standing beside a river in what is now Lyon, on ground which is now part of a country called France. But this is not now, this is then. You are a tottering biped doing what you can to get along, but without anything we would remotely think of as consciousness, or at least not human consciousness.

There is something slightly odd about you that distinguishes you from the rest of your band, not a radical mutation, no massively rewritten central nervous system, just a slightly different emphasis to the way you react to your environment. If the other members of your band were capable of language, which of course they are not, and if they referred to each other by nicknames, which of course they don’t, they would call you by a name that meant ‘that nervous guy who makes mistakes all the time.’ And this description would appear, on the face of it, to be accurate. When you walk through the forest and the wind blows a branch above your head, just for a moment you don’t see it as a branch but as a predator steadying itself for the attack. And when the light dapples through the trees in the early evening those two gaps in the leaves look to you, for a split second, not like innocent sunlight, but the eyes of a vicious big cat reflecting the last gleams of the dying day. The sound of the grass crackling as it cools in the night sound too much like the snuffling of animals, or the hissing of enemies outside your hut to let you rest until you have checked again that everything is safe.

If these were the only mistakes you made, the others might have called you by a name that means ‘the paranoid one’, but your confusions travel in other directions also. The red wing of a bird in a branch momentarily fills you with hope as you mistake it for a ripe pomegranate. A moment of lust accompanies your apprehension of a gazelle for the brief second that you mistake it for a beautiful and graceful female of your own species. Yes, you are undoubtedly ‘the guy who makes mistakes all the time’.

Strangely enough, despite the fact that you make more errors than any other creature around, you are also oldest the member of your band, so these mistakes cannot be fatal. And since you have many females and many many offspring your constant errors have not prevented you from spreading your seed. In fact, although the young you have sired seem to be similarly afflicted by this odd trait of mistaking one thing for another, few of them have died so far. It is almost as if, by seeing opportunities and threats where none exist, you have improved their chances of survival. It is almost as if seeing one thing as something else has given your offspring an evolutionary advantage over the others.

Posted in Evolution, History, Metaphor | No Comments »

A Handful of Metaphors

October 4th, 2007 Fred McVittie

“It may be that universal history is the history of a handful of metaphors”. (Borges. 1964. p.224)

Posted in Borges, Jorge Louis, History, Metaphor, Universals, thesis | No Comments »

Window metaphors of Visual Consciousness

October 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

One of the most enduring and intuitively satisfying images for perception (and by metaphorical inference for ‘knowing’) is that of the window. However much we may construct alternatives, or work to disabuse ourselves of this image, it is nevertheless extremely persistent. The window metaphor conceives of perceptual consciousness as formed around this image, and with one’s understanding of ’self’ depending on where one is located, and with which parts of the image one identifies. This image has six (or possibly seven) components, three of which are standard components of all images, both mental and actual. These are:

? The space in which the image appears, usually a three dimensional space replicating the Cartesian space of lived experience.
? A viewing position within that space from which one observes the image, usually from outside of the image itself but sometimes contained within it.
? The direction of the imaginary gaze from the mental viewing position, probably toward a particular point on the image or scene.

All mental images have these elements as standard; the ‘window’ image also contains three (or maybe four) other elements or entailments, the conceptualisation of which determines the state of one’s perceptual consciousness within the limits of the metaphor. These additional components are:

? The space ‘outside’ the window, which in terms of perceptual consciousness is usually conceived of as the objective world.
? The space ‘inside’ the window, which is understood to be the mental space of thought, mind, memory, imagination, and subjective existence.
? The frame of the window, which in visual terms has the incorporated form of the dark border to our vision formed by the eye-sockets, the nose, and the top of the cheeks. Conceptually this frame is the edge of the visual field.
? (Possibly) the surface of the window itself corresponding to the pane of glass which separates outside from inside. I say ‘possibly’ because I personally find no evidence for the appearance of this part of the image in my mind when I look at my mental image of the window and apply it to my cognition.

The default setting for this image as a conceptual metaphor for consciousness places our ’self’ within the internal space, looking through the ‘frame’ of our eye-sockets into the other space of objective interpersonal reality. Support for the ubiquity of this experience presumably comes partly from the very real and tangible existence of the ‘frame’ component, but also from the intuitive, if not innate tendency that we have to locate our identity, and indeed that of others, within an interior space. Experiments with the naïve knowledge of children suggests that we acquire this sense at a very young age indeed, and that this essentialist idea of (self) identity as existing inside the body, and certainly behind the eyes, is not something that is learned through formal or informal cultural practices, but is implicit in the structure of a universal human engagement with the world. The window metaphor then, whilst having no real basis in psychology or neuroscience, corresponds sufficiently well with some elements of naïve knowing and with some facts of embodiment for it to feel ‘right’ as an image of perceptual consciousness.

Posted in Boundary, Cognition, Imagination, Metaphor, Mind, Perception | No Comments »

God of the Gaps (in embodied knowledge)

October 22nd, 2007 Fred McVittie

The ‘God of the Gaps’ argument critiques certain approaches to theism on the grounds that, if we use God as an explanation for all those phenomena that we do not understand, then as our understanding increases, inevitably God decreases. Presumably then, the hypothetical end point to such inevitable progression of knowledge would be an epistemological universe in which no space was left in which God might hide. Even if knowledge is never total, as it surely will never be, this understanding of God is still problematic as it presents an image of a deity which is in a state of progressive decline. Every new article of information, from the most robust and powerful scientific theory to the simplest new fact acquired through routine acts of perception constitutes an amputation of the limb of God. For this reason the ‘God of the Gaps’ description of a deity has been roundly criticised as both a failure of the scientific imagination and an insult to the Almighty.

Having said that, a case could be made for a different kind of God of the Gaps, if we understand these gaps not to be in knowledge, but in our ability to conceptualise this knowledge in a way that was directly embodied.

The extensive work done in the field of Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Embodied Cognition points to the importance of our embodiment in our ability to make sense of ideas and to structure concepts. The outcome of such research suggests that whilst we are easily able to conceptualise concepts which have direct sensory impact (medium sized objects, forces, substances, schema etc), when we wish to think about anything which is beyond the horizon of our bodily experience we have to use indirect methods. Chief among these methods is the systematic and consistent use of metaphor, such that we think of concepts which are abstract in terms of others which are concrete. We commonly think of love for example, as a journey, or of anger as heat in a sealed container. (These examples are from Lakoff and Johnson’s excellent introduction to these ideas ‘Metaphors We Live By’). Outside the relatively narrow domain of direct embodied experience is all the really interesting stuff of science, philosophy, politics, culture, and religion. Most of these practices, it can be demonstrated, are concerned with abstractions, and therefore the currency of their debates is metaphor and imagination.

In terms of science, As Stephen Jones points out in ‘Physics and Metaphor’, many of the most robust and elegant theories of science are understood only through acts of imagination. The concept of the origin of the universe in a Big Bang is one such example of this. Whatever event took place that triggered the subsequent creation of all that we see around us today clearly was not Big and did not go Bang. Yet this image of a kind of explosion is a useful image around which to structure our understanding of something that we simply are not adaptively equipped to understand literally. This does not mean that something that we call the Big Bang didn’t happen, it simply means that we are too stupid to understand it without drawing a picture of it, rather like the scene in Mad Max: Beyond the Thunderdome, where a group of post-apocalyptic children try to recreate television using using only cargo-cult materials of sticks and leaves. The big difference that makes a difference between the children in Mad Max and Georges Lemaître (an early proponent of the Big Bang Theory) is that Lemaitre tested his imaginary explosion against the data of other ideas and theories. As Richard Dawkins might put it, the image of the Big Bang is the beginning of a knowledge-gathering process whereas the TV made of sticks is the end.

This example, of the organised application of imagination to fill a significant gap in embodied knowledge, is typical of the way that science works, and indeed is also typical of the way that non-scientific gaps are filled. When I talk to my children about what they will do in the future, the question of a career often comes up, but if I am honest I have absolutely no idea what a career is. It has no smell, taste, or visible substance, and I can’t hear it or touch it. In fact I have to admit that there is a huge gap in my ability to think literally about their career. This doesn’t seem to stop me thinking about it though, and the way I do it is through the (largely unconscious) use of metaphor. If I look closely at how I am thinking I would say that I imagine their careers as something like the flight of an arrow, launched upwards and curving gently to arrive at a desired target, and I try not to imagine them as careering out of control like a driverless vehicle, a danger to themselves and passers-by alike. Without some kind of image like this I don’t see how I could conceive of something like ‘a career’ at all.

Which brings me, finally, to the God of the Gaps. Given that much of what we say and think is outside embodiable range, and is therefore in this realm of the metaphorical and the imaginary (up to 90% by some estimates), this means that our thoughts are entirely dominated by the imagination and it is not some freaky little playground in the corner of our brains where only fairies and artists hang out. It also means, at noted earlier, that any idea which is even remotely interesting is probably suffused with imagination, if not constructed of it entirely. If I was a theist, which I am not thank Richard, I would definitely want my God to be at least as wild as the Big Bang, if not more so, which would definitely put it in imagination territory.

The bottom line with any conceptual metaphor and any imaginary entity yielded by that metaphor is how well it functions. The Big Bang metaphor works really well to cohere data and observations into a single big picture. The flight path of the arrow that (I hope) traces my kids’ career also helps them organise and plan their actions. I am quite happy to believe in an imaginary God; at least to the extent that I believe in the Big Bang or a Career Plan. I can see some potential value in this kind of God of the Gaps, a complex, coherent anthropomorphic metaphor which helps to give form to certain aspects of the universe that are beyond my embodiment. If someone can show me what the function of this particular imaginary entity is, ideally someone who does not misunderstand science and the imagination to such an extent that they insist that God is real, I’d be happy to consider believing in it, (although I would probably draw the line at worship).

Posted in Embodiment, God, Imagination, Metaphor, Science, Universe | 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 »

Metaphor Theory as a Conceptual Framework

November 4th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Conceptual metaphor theory provides a meta-analytic framework to consider a range of different types of writing: scientific, poetry, impressionistic, anecdotal, imagistic, and technical. All of these highly varied writing forms, and the concepts they refer to, are ultimately grounded in the common vocabulary of the body and the sensorimotor system. Indeed, there is no good reason why non-written forms might not also be embraced within the terms of CMT since pictures, actions, objects, etc are as susceptible to metaphor analysis as written or spoken texts.

George Lakoff in ‘Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things’ begins just such a cross-modal analysis in his discussion of the concept of anger. Through the identification of a key metaphor for anger in which it is conceived of as pressure in a sealed container, (usually in the presence of heat), he is able to track this idea across personal narratives, cartoon images, fictional writings, and scientific (psychoanalytic) texts.

The common ground of conceptual metaphor in which all expression operates, regardless of its status as objective or subjective, personal or interpersonal, scientific or artistic, provides a space in which all of these expressive forms can be considered.

It further seems likely that the organisational devices that hold together individual and collective pieces of writing might also function metaphorically, as for example when we understand a story as having a ‘narrative arc’. The ‘arc’ of a story, whilst evidently abstract and intangible, is conceptualised through embodied experiences of similar arcs in the physical world, the most common being the flight of a projectile or possibly the swinging of the limbs during walking. These physical schema provide the source metaphor for an embodied understanding of the structure through which ideas are expressed. It may be interesting to consider what embodied schema may (or may not) be mobilised in the understanding of texts which have non-linear structures, this blog for example.

Posted in Binding, Metaphor, Schema, Theory, thesis | No Comments »

Knowledge, Proximity, Imagination

November 6th, 2007 Fred McVittie

‘Imagination is our capacity to organise mental representations (especially percepts, images, and image schemata) into meaningful coherent unities.’ (Johnson. 1987: p.140)

In ‘The Body in the Mind’ Johnson reminds us of the Platonic categorisation of modes of cognition, in which the validity of knowledge is seen to vary according to how one approaches its collection. Most valued is knowledge acquired by intellection (noesis), in which the unchanging ‘essence’ of the knowledge is grasped. At the bottom of the scale of knowing is imagination (eikasia) in which only ‘images, shadows, reflections’ (p.142) are apprehended, not the essential knowledge itself.

This structure of distinction, it can be noted, also arranges knowledge across the spectra of proximity and the senses, locating the essence of knowing close to the body where it can be ‘grasped’, and the less secure knowing offered by the Platonic imagination placed at some remove where only its surface appearance, or even only traces of that appearance such as a shadow, can be apprehended. Interestingly, there is no suggestion within this scheme of the later association of closeness/’feltness’ with subjectivity, or of distance/visibility with objectivity. In our current understanding,as revealed through the metaphors we use, we give a great deal of credence to objective knowledge described in visual terms and located figuratively at a distance in interpersonal space. We correspondingly give less credence to subjective knowledge described in tactile terms and located up close and personal (even though we may intuitively ‘feel’ this subjective knowledge as more ‘real’ than the objective knowledge of intersubjectively validated visual knowing). This modern value distinction between the subjective and the objective does not appear in Plato’s categorisation.

Posted in Essence, History, Imagination, Knowledge, Metaphor, Plato, Proximity, Space, thesis | No Comments »

Enlightenment from Sensory Collapse

November 7th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The attainment of Enlightenment (or something like it) may be aided by the process in which visual and auditory sensory experiences are transformed into tactile or proprioceptive experiences. This shift in sensory engagement from the seen to the felt collapses the (conceptual) space which radically separated seer from seen, replacing it with contact. When the connection between subject and object is conceived as direct contact (or even immersion) then the separation between these concepts disappears and non-duality is achieved. In metaphorical terms this collapse involves a remapping of concepts from sources based in the visual (and auditory) to sources which are located next to, or inside of the body, rather that ‘over there’.

Posted in Enlightenment, Metaphor, Non-duality, Proximity, Sense | No Comments »

Emergence Metaphors of Consciousness

November 9th, 2007 Fred McVittie

The term ‘emergent’ is used extensively to describe the appearance of a property which is associated with a complex system but which is not easily described or predicted from an analysis of the individual components which make up that system. An oft-quoted example of an emergent entity is consciousness, (see Hameroff 1994, Diaz 2000, Jordan & Ghin 2006, Seager 2006)which seems inexplicable as a phenomenon from an examination of the substance or actions of neurons in the brain with which it is obviously associated. This is the so-called ‘hard problem’ identified by David Chalmers.

This ‘emergence’, it is worth noting, is obviously a metaphorical concept, mobilised to provide a framework for understanding something that would otherwise be incomprehensible (c.f. Lakoff and Johnson 1987). Given the metaphorical status of the concept, it is also significant that when the term is used to explain a phenomenon like consciousness only part of the metaphor is used. There are entailments to the metaphor (or more accurately ’schema’), that problematise the overall understanding of emergence, particularly its status as an alternative to the more metaphysical interpretations of consciousness implied by panpsychism.

The ‘emergence’ metaphor structures an understanding of consciousness using a variation of the widespread ‘containment’ schema described by Johnson which underpins much of our understanding of categories and the ‘movement’ of concepts into and out of those categories. So, for example, we talk of someone being ‘in the army’ in which ‘the army’ is considered as a kind of container with an interior, an exterior, and some kind of boundary separating these two regions, the ‘walls’ of the container. This metaphorical container also has a portal of some kind which allows for limited and controlled movement across the boundary from one region to the other. So in this example the interior and exterior regions are ‘army life’ and ‘civilian life’ and the portal is constituted of the various protocols which allow one to move from one to the other. To go from the outside to the inside is to ‘go into’ the army, and to move in the opposite direction is to ‘leave’ the army. The ‘emergence’ metaphor clearly relates to this overall schema in its mobilisation of our understanding of portals and containers. To ‘emerge’ is to move from an interior space to an exterior space (as a bear might emerge from a cave). It is also significant that this imaginary interior space is hidden from sight; whatever processes cause this emergence are invisible to us. So in the case of emergent phenomena, whatever interactions take place between the individual physical components, neurons in the case of consciousness, the particular processes which cause it to emerge are consigned to the interior space behind the boundary. The idea that consciousness ‘emerges’ therefore determines its apparently unknowable nature; there is no way within the schema activated by the ‘emergence’ metaphor that a satisfactory explanation of consciousness could be found, since the metaphor demands that such explanation lies in an inaccessible interior conceptual space.

A second aspect of ‘emergent’ consciousness which is usually overlooked when this particular metaphor is used is the requirement that there be an exterior space for the phenomenon to emerge into. In the example noted above, the person who is ‘in the army’, that is, who is categorised using the metaphor of containment, clearly emerges into civilian life when their time in the service is complete. The exterior of the ‘army’ container/category is well-defined and maps accurately onto the lived and embodied experience of the individual concerned. The emergence of consciousness, however, shows no such consistency. It is far from clear what aspect of lived experience maps onto the exterior region that consciousness emerges into.

Díaz, José-Luis (2000). Mind-body unity, dual aspect, and the emergence of consciousness. Philosophical Psychology 13 (3):393-403.

Hameroff, Stuart R. - Quantum coherence in microtubules: A neural basis for emergent consciousness? Journal of Consciousness Studies, Volume 1, Number 1, 1994 , pp. 91-118(28)

Jordan, J. Scott & Ghin, Marcello (2006). (Proto-) consciousness as a contextually emergent property of self-sustaining systems. Mind and Matter 4 (1):45-68.

Seager, William (2006). The emergence of consciousness. Philosophic Exchange 36:5-23.

Posted in Consciousness, Emergence, Metaphor, Schema | No Comments »

Soul of an Atheist - Past of the Self

November 11th, 2007 Fred McVittie

When we are invited to look into the past, to consider who we are in relation to who we were, in which direction do we look? When we usually look back in time we look… back. We tend to consider time as a kind of river that is bearing us forward, or as a road that we have traveled, with the events of the past littering that road like the cast-off skins of a snake, or like flotsam bobbing in a boat’s wake and receding behind us as we proceed toward the distant shores of the future. There is the school we went to, and there are our parents. And the further back in time we look the more distant are the objects and events we look to. Last year is close on our heels, our memory of reading that newspaper item about a bombing and the death of some people we will never know, or the article about that celebrity coming our of rehab. Beyond these recent landmarks, and perhaps diminished by distance, we might see that same celebrity going into rehab, and the atrocity which provoked the planting of that bomb. These remote incidents may be harder to make out, blurring into the haze of hundreds of others, or they may be occluded by those events which followed them, and which now follow us. Here is the past as a journey that we are taking, and a country that we are constantly emigrating from..

Thinking about the past of our own self, our own most personal sense of being, is somewhat different however. Whilst the events, places, and people of the past are left behind in our life journey, our past self is not so easily abandoned by the roadside. Think back to your tenth birthday, maybe you had a party, maybe someone gave you a microscope, or a Hot Wheels set, or a book about trains. Or maybe your party was cancelled because you had a fever and had to spend the day in bed. Maybe you remember that day very well or maybe you hardly recall it at all. If you can revisit that day you may find yourself looking out briefly through the eyes of your newly ten-year-old self and maybe even feeling the stirrings of those smaller bones and muscles within your own. You may find yourself drawn to stand how you stood when you took the present from your Mother’s arms, or hold your hands in the way you held them as you adjusted the focus on that microscope for the first time, squinting down through the eyepiece at the gigantic wing of a housefly.

Here the past is not behind you, lost along the road or adrift in ancient seas, the past of your self is lurking inside, just beneath the skin of the present. The skin of this snake is not sloughed off, abandoned, and left for dead, but is grown over with its circulation and its senses intact. Your ten-year-old self is not doomed to wander lost through 1970’s supermarkets or wait to be picked up by school gates that no longer exist, its home is secured in the body of the here and now.

Posted in Atheism, History, Metaphor, Self, Soul, Time | No Comments »

Darkness at Noon - Objectivity and Undeniability

November 23rd, 2007 Fred McVittie

A common metaphor for the acquisition of knowledge is that of ’seeing’. When we want to refer to such gaining of knowledge we might explicitly say ‘I see’, meaning that we have such an understanding. As noted elsewhere, this visual metaphor for knowing also confers object-like status on the knowledge itself and we intuitively begin to treat it as if it were some kind of object that can be ‘grasped’, ‘acquired’, and ‘transferred’, or might be ‘hard’, ‘robust’, or less positively ’slippery’.

The visual metaphor for knowing also has a number of significant entailments which figure within the structure of the metaphor but which may be less obvious. Firstly there is the requirement that these ‘objects’ of knowledge exist in some kind of conceptual ’space’, usually external to the body (obviously, or we would not be able to ’see’ them), and secondly that this space be illuminated. This latter point is evidenced in our references to being ‘in the dark’; we use this and similar phrases when we want to indicate that we know that certain facts (knowledge objects) are ‘out there’ but we cannot see them.

Some types of knowing are conceptualised without the use of the visual metaphor, and in these cases some other sensory mode is usually referred to. So for example, when we want to indicate that we understand what a person is saying but do not want to simply agree with their viewpoint (sic) we might say ‘I hear what you’re saying’. By using an auditory rather than a visual metaphor we have acknowledged the existence of the facts the other person is claiming sight of but have not awarded those facts the full objective status that would be implied by saying that we also ’saw’ what they meant. We are acknowledging the existence of their words, but holding back on accepting the truth claims that those words make. To this extent we might say that (metaphorical) seeing is believing, whilst (metaphorical) hearing has something of the status of rumour; a good indication of what the other person thinks they know, but no guarantee of authority.

Other metaphorical senses used as labels for knowing have similar partial status; ‘felt’ knowledge is usual personal and tacit, and the defining feature of that form of knowing we call ‘taste’ is that it is not ‘out there’ in interpersonal space at all but is inside the body, inside the mouth. Strangely, these up close and personal (or even internal, interoceptive) forms of knowing, whilst they may not have the interpersonal and social authority of ’seen’ facts often have a feeling of personal authority which exceeds the objective. Whilst we may rationally understand that ‘feelings aren’t facts’ as the AA mantra goes, at the same time there is an undeniability of this type of felt knowledge which is often lacking in the objective. Many of us will have had the sense that, whilst all the (objective) facts about a certain phenomenon say one thing, our guts say something else, and that ‘gut feeling’ has a authoritative quality which is hard to overcome.

Obviously these acts of knowing that draw on non-visual metaphors have different, and usually lower social status than the objective knowledge of the seen. In any official context, or in any claim for the authority mentioned above, it is visual, ‘objective’ knowledge which holds sway. For this reason it is not surprising that when we wish to imply that our ideas should be treated as authoritative we tend to use visual metaphors to frame those ideas. Any politician who argued that his opponents ideas were invalid because they were ‘not to his taste’ would get short shrift from those who argued that the truth of such ideas ‘could easily be seen’.

Occasionally the visual metaphor is used to articulate a belief about the status of knowledge which is not easily shared, or which has ambiguous status, and this is most clearly revealed in the language around enlightenment and spiritual experiences. Typically, a person experiencing some kind of epiphany or divine revelation would claim that this experience constitutes the gaining of knowledge or insight, usually a particularly significant or transformative insight which seems to have something to say about the external world. To this extent it requires an objective explanation. Also, such experiences tend to have a quality of undeniability about them; it is rare for a person having such an experience to doubt the reality of it, in the way one might doubt the reality of a contestable fact. To this extent such experiences also demand an explanatory form which indicates the felt certainty of that knowledge. For these reasons, any desire to communicate this experience and share the knowledge thus gained would require that this communication use sensory metaphors which convey the most authority, which as already noted tend to be visual metaphors with all the entailments of space and light that go along with them. (This paragraph has already mobilised some of these metaphors as exemplified in words like ‘enlightenment’ and ‘insight’). They would also require the use of metaphors which convey the ‘felt’ sense of the experience, with all of the self-evident undeniability of the closely-held belief, (again the idea of a belief being ‘closely held’ indicates the mobilisation of an appropriate metaphor, and the unavoidability of using such metaphors in writing and thinking about these concepts). The requirements of a form of expression and conceptualisation appropriate to these experiences inevitably lead to paradox; one must find a way of thinking and speaking which simultaneously evokes the metaphorically exterior space in which objects of knowledge gain their interpersonal authority, a space which is illuminated and translucent, but one must also suggest the darkness and contact of the internal space which give an undeniably sense of phenomenological truth. This necessary paradox may help to explain why some authors, when trying to articulate the enlightenment state (or cognate conditions) use apparently oxymoronic terms such as ‘the dazzling dark’, or possibly in the case of alien abduction, a strange set of (probably confabulated) experiences in which similar symptoms to enlightenment are featured, the light emitted by the aliens or the ships has been described as ‘white, but dark white’.

Posted in Belief, Darkness, Feeling, Grasp, Hearing, Knowledge, Light, Metaphor, Objectivity, Seeing, Sense, Space, Taste | No Comments »

Light as a Metaphor

December 14th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Although light is intangible and uncontainable it nevertheless has a rich significance in the world of thought. This is possibly because the perception of light is a key component of the visual sense, which is the dominant mode in human sensory awareness, with up to 50% of the processing power of the brain being given over to vision. Light underpins out ability to see and therefore, despite its ephemeral nature, is central to our conceptualisation. The important position of light as a concept is revealed in the metaphorical uses it fulfills, and significant connections are evidenced between the different phenomena to which the metaphor of light is applied.

Light metaphors tend to be applied to the various abstract phenomena broadly understood as ‘knowledge’, and particularly, the acquistion of said knowledge. This is exhibited most clearly (sic) when we say that we ’see’ what a person means when we want to indicate that the knowledge that the person is pointing us to is objectively available to us also. We also refer to the gaining of knowledge as ‘illumination’ or ‘enlightenment’ and support the metaphor with reference to ‘light bulb’ moments, ideas ‘dawning’ on us, ‘flashes’ of inspiration, etc.

The source of the light metaphor is, as noted, the role of actual visible light within visual perception. Even though light itself cannot be easily seen, it is necessary for seeing to take place; when we look at a tree we do not see the light filling the space between the tree and our eyes, we ’simply’ see the tree. However, since the absence of light is also the absence of sight, this natural concurrence gives light something of the status of an embodiable phenomenon. We feel that it is a concrete, sensorially available entity, even though in actuality, when distinguished from the objects which it illuminates, it is exposed as a deeply abstract concept beyond the horizon of direct experience.

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The Dark and Light of Dying

December 16th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Two images dominate our understanding of the death experience. In the first of these we imagine death as an embrace of the darkness. We find this in poetic metaphors of ‘the dying of the light’ against which we should rage, in visual representations of death as associated with blackness, impenetrability, and night, and in images of ‘fading’ consciousness, squeezing out of sparks, and the dimming of brilliance in senility. Conversely, there is the apparently paradoxical metaphor which associates death with entering illumination, a moving toward the light and a merging with the glory of that light.

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The Weight of Stuff

December 30th, 2007 Fred McVittie

Items of knowing are often awarded the metaphorical status of ‘objects’ and have a schematic ontology mapped from the concrete ontology of objects in the real world of embodied experience. One aspect of real world objects which may feature as an entailment within an understanding of knowledge objects is that different objects are made of different ’stuff’. These differences, and the ways these differences in materiality affect the functioning of the object, are metaphorically mapped as structure.

The first of these properties of stuff is the weight that objects seem to have. Weight is experienced as a resistance to being lifted, or alternatively (niavely) as a ‘desire’ or tendency for the object to move downwards. Whilst we know (after Galileo) that all objects of whatever weight all have this tendency in equal amounts, this is not the intuitive impression one has when holding objects of different weights; it is usually felt that the heavier object ‘wants’ to get to the ground first. Whilst this impression is demonstrably wrong, it is still a compelling illusion and feeds into our intuitive understanding of objects. The apparent correspondence between weight and the tendency to move to a low point in the vertical dimension suggests that there will be a similar correspondence in the use of weight and height metaphors. When we look at the use of these metaphors in action we find that this relationship is indeed suggested. As noted elsewhere, high points in the vertical dimension are associated with knowledge, omniscience, enlightenment, ‘raised’ consciousness etc. and these phenomena are usually also associated with condition of lightness in weight. Chesterton is attributed with saying that ‘angels can fly because they take themselves lightly’. Conversely, low points are associated with heaviness, immovability, and the inertia that comes with weight.

The second property of objects that may serve as a structuring entailment of the use of objects as metaphors for knowing is the substance quality of different object; to what extent an object is solid, hard, soft, liquid, or gaseous. These different substantive qualities allow different affordance relationships to be established; hard objects can be grasped, held, built upon, stacked, used as foundations, treated as permanent etc. whereas softer objects are malleable, change their shape with contact, and can be smushed together. Liquid objects can be felt but not held, adopt the shape of the container in which they are placed, and disappear when they are not contained. Gaseous objects, clouds for example, barely exist as ‘objects’ at all, they disappear on close scrutiny, make no impact on the body, are often co-terminous with the space in which they appear, and may move inside the body unseen at every breath. These differences in substance that objects have are available as entailments of the knowledge object metaphor. Like real substances, knowledge might be hard or soft, it may be regarded as foundational and permanent or more socially malleable, it may only appear solid and bounded when placed at a distance (like a cloud) but disappear into evanescence when approached, it may seep into the body and become part of the chemistry of being.

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Light and Space

January 17th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The key role that light plays in our metaphorical conceptualisation of knowing is linked to other elements or entailments of the overall schema KNOWING IS SEEING. Seeing is dependent upon the medium of light for its functioning, and closely related to this is the space which the light occupies and which allows for both the separation and the containment of the object of vision. In order to see something that thing must exist in a brightly lit shared space with ourselves, it must be separated from us within a prescribed distance, and it must not be obscured or occluded by other things. Only when all these conditions are met can the act of seeing take place. The relationship between the components of this schema, light and space, is such that they are inextricably linked; we cannot divorce the space from its illumination. A space which is totally dark, in visual terms ends at the surface of our eyeballs. A visually extended space, on the other hand, is defined by the extent to which it is flooded with light. The conscionable space ends at the limits of the light, and while we might suspect the space continuing into the shadows there is a distinctly different ontology to such a space; it is ambiguous, impenetrable, filled with the absence of lightness.

The conceptual metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING which derives from the phenomenology of sight similarly echoes this tangled relation between light and space. To know something is to recognise its existence out there in the illuminated space beyond our eyes, and we invoke the metaphor whenever we say ‘I see’ when we really mean ‘I know’. Also, the limits and entailments of the metaphor transfer to our conceptualisation of what knowing is. If the object of our knowing is too close to our self the elision of the spatial separation also banishes the light and we can no longer claim to have this kind of visual knowledge. An object held against the heart ceases to be visible, and similarly with objects of knowing, when we are too personally involved the object ceases to have the objectivity which light and distance conferred upon it. It is barely an object at all and seems to be part of our selves, part of our subjectivity.

Alternatively, if the object is too metaphorically distant from us we may have great difficulty seeing it at all. We may sense that it is partly hidden in shadow and it may even inherit an eldritch strangeness from the darkness toward which it leans. At such a remove the object of knowing becomes part of occult knowledge, secretive, hidden and the property of the gnostic.

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Modes of Sensory Knowing

January 28th, 2008 Fred McVittie

Knowledge (or knowing) is not a singular type of entity with clearly-defined parameters, rather the objects or entities of knowledge are conceptualised as existing along a continuum from ‘objective’ at one end to ’subjective’ at the other. This paper will propose that this distinction, and the continuum which it articulates, is derived from a single metaphorical schema through which the abstract notion of ‘knowing’ is grounded in the sensory experiences of the body.

The guiding metaphor for human knowing is derived from the experience of human sensing. The structure and details of our sensory embodiment provides the schema with which the abstractions of cognitive meaning-making is rendered comprehensible and conscious. The overall schema has particular entailments which carry over into our organisation of knowledge such that different types of knowing are associated with differences in the organisation of human sensory awareness. The visual sense has characteristics which distinguish it from the sense of touch, and both these sensory modes have differences from the sense of taste, and the differences in these characteristics provide a metaphorical template for differences in knowledge. Some of the differences in these modes, and which carry over into their metaphorical application to the structure of our concept of knowledge, include:

  • Distance/Proximity - The different senses are able to operate at different distances from the body. (Allied to this is the feature of Salience, in which proximity to the body indicates increasing salience; it is a necessary feature of human cognition that objects or events which occur close to, or at the surface of the body should have a high level of relevance)..
  • Intersubjectivity - Some sensory modes operate in shared public space (seeing being the paradigmatic public form), whilst others operate purely in relation to a single individual (as exemplified by taste).
  • Substantiality - Some sensory modes provide information which appears clearly bounded (as with a visualised object) whilst that provided by other modes is blended, suffuse, or indistinct (sounds or smells for example).
  • Vectoriality - The information provided by some sense seems to offer a direction from which it arises (or a vector for the intentionality which locates it) whereas that provided by other senses seems not to offer this extension.
  • Spatial Orientation - Related to Vectoriality, some senses suggest a particular alignment or spatialisation in which some information is more available than others. This is particularly evident with vision which only operates in a forward direction. (The detailed particularities of visual awareness suggests a number of other particularities which we do not have space to discuss here).

These characteristics, which mark the differences between the different sensory modes, can be shown to map onto the metaphorical schema that we use to understand and structure our concept of ‘knowledge’.

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Conceptual Metaphor in Science

January 30th, 2008 Fred McVittie

Modern physics teaches us that there is more to truth than meets the eye; or than meets the all too limited human mind, evolved as it was to cope with medium-sized objects moving at medium speeds through medium distances in Africa. (Bridgman, in Dawkins and Menon 2003: p.48)

A Devil’s Chaplain: Reflections on Hope, Lies, Science, and Love. Richard Dawkins. viii + 263 pp. Houghton Mifflin, 2003.

The limitations of the human mind indicated by Dawkins in the quotation above are the result of the parsimony of evolution and its demand to contingent solutions to immediate problems. Our adaptive history has not prepared us for conceptual engagement with quarks, neutron stars, or the further reaches of quantum mechanics. Nor are we constitutionally prepared to confront the abstractions of philosophy, religion, and the social sciences. The mystery therefore is that, despite these evident limitations, we do indeed engage with such abstractions to a remarkable degree, and with an equally remarkable degree of success. On the face of it seems that JBS Haldane was wrong when he wrote:

The universe may not only be queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose. (1927: p.286).

What needs to be explained is the mechanism through which we carry out such queer supposing. A key idea which punctuates the equilibrium of this writing is that such queerness is rendered comprehensible through the extensive, and largely unconscious, use of metaphor. That rather than metaphor merely being the stuff of poetic fancy it is a mainstay in the construction of our most fundamental and apparently straightforward thinking. (And if evidence of this were needed one would simply need to reread the previous sentence).

The appearance of metaphor in verbal language is seen as symptomatic of its appearance in thought, although it is axiomatic that such metaphorical conceptualizing also reveals itself in gestures, images, behaviours, artworks, signs, symbols, and the anonymous trivia of everyday life.

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The Visible Structure of Knowledge Space

February 24th, 2008 Fred McVittie

When we talk about ‘knowledge space’ we are almost invariably talking about ‘objective’ knowledge. That is, knowledge which has something of the quality of an object, that can be seen clearly, approached, and possessed. The metaphor used to conceptualise this kind of space and the knowledge objects it contains, are usually visual metaphors, (as already used in the preceding sentence). Put another way, we conceive of space, particularly shared interpersonal space, as primarily determined visually, with discreet objects placed within that space and globally available for anyone with eyes to ’see’. As a metaphor for knowledge this space requires that knowledge appears globally visible as equally discreet knowledge objects. This understanding of knowledge space predetermines the structure of any knowledge which can ‘appear’ within it.

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Knowing is Sensing: Aural and Olfactory Modes of Knowing

February 24th, 2008 Fred McVittie

Sight and touch make an appearance on the sense which is coterminous with the origins of those sights and touchings. The object and the sight of that object are simultaneous. See a tree on the horizon, hold a rock in your hand, the rock and the feel of that rock are inseparable. The sight of a tree on the horizon does not signal the impending presence of a tree at some point in the future. The tree that we see is present at the moment of our seeing it. Similarly, the feel of a rock in one’s hand is not an indication that we may be in the presence of a rock at some undisclosed time, or have been in its presence in the past. The rock is here, now. The tree is there, now.

This immanence afforded by sight and touch is not shared by other sensory modes, particularly hearing and olfaction. Typically we hear the impending emergence of an entity prior to its physical manifestation. The crashing in the trees precedes the arrival of the bear into the clearing where we have pitched out tent. The sound may also persist after its departure as we hear its retreat. The ‘beingness’ of the bear which is indicated by the sounds we hear is smudged across a patch of time which extends some way in the future and the past. The scent of a bear, if we had the olfactory abilities of a dog, would show an even greater smearing of being. The lingering scent would not only spread the bear across space but across days of time. The bear would, in this sense, extend into the past, parts of itself clinging to trees and tentpoles and torn canvas and broken crockery, and the long trail of paw-shaped patches of ground that lead through the forest to the here and now of the visible touchable bear.

Applying this logic to the use of sensory modes as metaphors for knowledge there is a logical difference between phenomena which are sensed aurally or through smell than that which is accessed through sight and touch. Whereas seeing and touching refer to the now, hearing and smell also refer to the then of past and future. This difference in the way sensory modes operate should show up in the specifics of their application to the metaphor. It is well established that we use the concepts of felt and seen knowledge to specify that which is evidentially immanent; we say ‘I see what you mean’ and the time of that seeing is assumed to be immediate. We say ‘I feel bad about this’ and again the bad feeling is assumed to be taking place in the moment. When we use words which connect to olfactory or sound metaphors there is not the same self-evident immediacy. If we say ’something smells funny about this plan’ we are not making a claim that something is clearly (sic) amiss that anybody should be able to ’see’. Rather we are claiming some kind of intuitive knowledge about the status of the plan; we are indicating that we have sensed something about it which, although not presently obvious, will make itself obvious later, as the bear crashing through the woods eventually appears in the clearing. We cannot point to the source of our knowing such that it might appear in the senses of others because it is not visualisable in this way. We might say that we ‘just got wind of it’, or it is just ’something in the air’. Olfactory and auditory metaphors tend therefore, to be applied to knowledge which is outside of the subjective/objective dimension and is displaced in time. This is the sort of knowledge which is prescient, which speaks of premonitions, intuition, and ghosts from the past.

Posted in Embodiment, Hearing, Metaphor, Presence, Rock, Sense, Smell | No Comments »

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 »

Why Up is Good

March 17th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The superior access to knowledge that is implied by the use of height metaphors may also contribute toward the forming of a well-established metaphor which associates height with the abstract concept of ‘value’ or ‘goodness’. This is usually expressed within the conventional syntax of Conceptual Metaphor Theory as UP IS GOOD. Like all such metaphorical mappings this draws upon routine embodied sensorimotor experiences to structure and articulate what would otherwise be inconceivable; values such as ‘good’ and ‘bad’ are easily experienced in the particular but as general terms they make no impact on the senses, and can therefore only be conceptualised through the use of an organizing metaphor.

Evidence for the existence of the UP IS GOOD metaphorical mapping can be found in the extensive use of terms relating height to positive value or quality; we speak of ‘high value’, ‘high quality’, and ‘high performance’, and positive progress is usually considered as movement in an upward direction. When we wish to cite the ultimate authority we might refer to a ‘higher power’, or in more Earthly terms to someone who is at the top of their field, the top of their game, or the height of their success. We indicate value in commerce by saying that sales are up, production is up, employment is up, and profits are up, and we show this elevation on graphs and charts. We reach for the stars, climb the career ladder, move up the league, reach the top of the charts, and if we are churlish we might look down on those who are not at our level. In all of these instances the metaphorical correspondence between height and positive value is clear. In all cases UP IS GOOD. This consistency, in which positivity in many different areas is expressed using the same organizing metaphor, is strong evidence for its being grounded in a single experience or a small set of related experiences, ultimately originating in a common feature of our embodiment and the affordances it offers in relation to the environment in which it is embedded. Further evidence of the coherence and non-arbitrary nature of such an embodied metaphor is the fact that there is a complementary set of organizing metaphors which relate lack of height to negative value, expressible in the standard syntax as DOWN IS BAD. This is revealed in the badness of being ‘down in the dumps’, ‘beneath contempt’, ‘low on the totem pole’, a member of the ‘lower classes’ or possibly even the ‘underclass’, or ‘under the weather’. This correspondence in the relationships GOOD IS UP and DOWN IS BAD is a clear illustration of the non-arbitrary nature of these conceptual metaphors. The dimension of height, together with possible movement in this dimension, is an ‘image schema’ which structures a wide range of value-related concepts.

The most often cited origin for this schema refers to the common experience of acquiring and using material resources. In accumulating some kind of valuable resource, firewood for example, it is an obviousness that the more of this resource we accumulate the higher the pile will be. It follows from this completely embodied and indeed ancient fact of life that the pile of firewood which is high will have more value that one which is more lowly. Similarly, the height of a pile of fish, fruit, dead rabbits, projectile-sized rocks, gold, or any other substance which confers health, survival, or status, is a direct measure of the value of that pile. In terms of value, when it comes to the height of a pile of desirable material stuff, UP IS GOOD. This unambiguous and intuitive fact provides the concrete source from which we can structure, organise, and conceptualise the relative values of non-concrete entities such as ‘performance’, ‘esteem’, ‘profits’, ‘social status’, or ‘mood’. We may not be able to literally pile our achievements up and compare them to the pile of the guy next door, but when we use height-related terms to carry out such an evaluation that is, metaphorically, what we are doing.

Posted in Dimension, Feeling, Metaphor, Schema, Space, Up | No Comments »

What is ‘Knowledge’?

March 20th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The concept of ‘knowledge’ covers a wide variety of different expressions, with a correspondingly wide range of applications, values, and inclusions. A small sample of these might include: objective, subjective, tacit, explicit, declarative, propositional, carnal, occult, procedural, possessive, performative, proactive, and situated. Whilst some of these terms come in pairs, the tacit/explicit binary for example, most of them appear unconnected one to another and their coexistence within an overall category that one might call ‘knowledge’ seems a matter of convenience rather than structure. The diversity in these terms appears to offer no overall epistemological picture which we might use to relate the different terms, and likewise the objects and events to which these terms are applied, the contents of all these different types of knowing, can also appear unconnected. And to the extent that such contents of knowing are related, in dewey decimal system of libraries, encyclopedia, school and university prospectuses, and in the various ‘trees’ of knowledge that have been produced, such relationship smacks of the arbitrary. A good example of such trees include that centerpiece of Enlightenment thought, the Encyclopédie, ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers of Diderot and D’Alembert, with its exhaustive arboreal analysis of not only rational knowledge but also poetics, metaphysics, and Black Magic. Whilst such a mapping may give the appearance of connectedness and ultimately of coherence, this is ultimately an exercise in taxonomy rather than structure, of categorization rather than consilience.

We might be tempted to say that knowledge organization has moved on considerably since the 18th century when the Encyclopédie was written, and it is certainly true that few modern encyclopedias would give the same page space to divination as to the dressing of chamois leather which one finds in Diderot and D’Alembert. However, in terms of the development of a coherent image of how the different forms of knowing operate little has changed, and improvements have largely consisted of the cultivation of those branches of the tree which support the weight of scientific progress, and the vigorous pruning of those limbs which do not.

Taxonomic strategies of knowledge organization do not reveal the inner working of the great body of knowledge, rather they place the bones here, the viscera there, substituting the living pattern that connects with the geometrical placing of body parts in neatly labeled amphora.

What I will be arguing here is that knowledge in all of its forms does have coherence, and that this coherence comes from the way our minds and our bodies work in relation to that knowledge.

Posted in Embodiment, Knowledge, Metaphor, thesis | No Comments »

Knowing is Seeing: The ‘Height’ Entailment

March 21st, 2008 Fred McVittie

Applied to the general schema of knowledge and more specifically to the well-established metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING, the dimension of height has a very clear application, and to explore this it might be useful to remind ourselves of the benefits that seeing from a height brings to the primate in the treetop and the lookout in the crow’s nest. Height, in the physical world, allows one to see further and to see more. It offers the ability to see over obstructions to what lies beyond and extends one’s gaze further into the distance, effectively pushing back the horizon and opening up new vistas. Looking from a high place also lets one take in more of the landscape at a glance, uniting the fragments of this piece of land, this lake, these trees, into a singular vision. Height shows patterns that would be invisible close to; the river deltas and the regularity of the coastline. From a position that is sufficiently elevated one can see all the way to the edge of the world in all directions, taking in the entire disc of the world and finding oneself at the centre of that disc.

It can easily be demonstrated that this height dimension is brought into the overall knowledge metaphor as a useful entailment by recognizing its usage within language. It is no accident that Isaac Newton famously remarked that ‘If I have seen further than other men it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants’; there is an intuitively self-evident recognition implicit in this remark that the kind of sweeping breadth of vision which Newton brought to science was only possible through his being elevated to a height from which such vision becomes possible. Here the KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor is transparently employed such that seeing more, and seeing further, infers greater access to knowledge and ownership of larger swathes of that knowledge. There is a strong sense here of recognizing patterns and seeing beyond obstacles, glancing over the horizon of 15th century natural philosophy into the newly revealed regions of early science. The coherence of this metaphor, and the ease with which we accept its terms, is partly produced by the familiarity we have of the part played by height in the overall act of seeing, and the deployment of this play as an important entailment in the KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor.

Posted in Dimension, Knowledge, Metaphor, Seeing, Up | No Comments »

Why Up Feels Good

March 21st, 2008 Fred McVittie

Returning to the theme of height as an entailment of the metaphor KNOWING IS SEEING, I would like to offer an alternative to this explanation of the origin of the GOOD IS UP metaphor which has particular relevance to our overall understanding. In addition to the ‘high’ value implicit in a pile of desirable goods that achieves such height there is also the possible value conferred by placing oneself in a high place. It is a routine experience available to all of us that standing on high ground allows one to see further than standing on low ground, and there is undoubtedly a certain pleasure associated with this kind of elevated looking. To offer a view out across an expanse of land or sea; to look at distant mountains and clear to the horizon is every house-buyer and estate agent’s dream. Everyone wants a room with a view and our coastlines are dotted with pay-per-view telescopes to further service those desires. Presumably, for our ancestors vying for survival on the plains of West Africa, having the sense to find high ground, or the topmost branch of a tree, would grant enormous survival advantages. Up there one can see the approach of predators and the gathering clouds of an approaching storm. The wildebeest are visible from up here whereas to those less fortunate primates on the ground they may as well not exist at all. In such circumstances, nature would be remiss if it did not reward those of our forebears who rose to the occasion by making being-at-the-top feel good. It seems quite likely that the lingering liking we all have for the house on the hill, the cliff-top hotel, the sea-view and the top bunk is a remnant of those times when, for purely practical reasons, UP IS GOOD. It also seems reasonable to imagine that, if we needed a dimension to measure relative values of abstract concepts, then the height dimension would serve very well. Being able to see farther than other men not only confers a literal survival advantage, experienced aesthetically as pleasure, but the metaphorical elevation of oneself such that one might look out over an extended field of knowledge mirrors this embodied and experienced sense. Desire for the acquisition of knowledge, the ‘cognitive imperative’ as Newberg and D’Aquili call it, drives us up the tree. It is the great human survival trick, the equivalent of the bower bird’s nest and the beaver’s dam, and the gaining of knowledge is regarded as a high (sic) value activity. From this it follows that those metaphorical positions occupied by individuals who have access to enhanced knowledge would similarly be regarded as high value. In this analysis UP IS GOOD because, as an entailment of the KNOWING IS SEEING metaphor, UP is the place where the really valuable seeing, and hence valuable knowing, takes place.

Posted in Dimension, Evolution, Feeling, Metaphor, Sense, Up | No Comments »

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 »

Cross-modal sensory mapping.

April 13th, 2008 Fred McVittie

The analysis of texts which use sensory mode based metaphors, i.e. that refer to ‘touch’, ‘taste’, ’see’, in a non-literal way, shows that there are a number of consistent patterns within this usage, including patterns of relations between the sensory modes. For example, Shen & Cohen (1989) demonstrate that within poetic texts there is a predictable and coherent use of what they refer to as ’synaesthetic’ metaphors, in which the properties of one sensory modality is mapped onto the other. They give the example of phrases such as ’sweet silence’, and point out that in phrases such as this the modality which they refer to as ‘lower’, i.e. closer to the body, in these cases the sense of taste or touch, is mapped onto the ‘higher’ or less proximal sense. Also, the ‘higher’ sense which forms the target of this metaphor is usually less accessible, less easy to ‘grasp’. So, in the case of ’sweet silence’, the higher and more ethereal auditory quality of silence is referred to using the more delineated, accessible, and proximal sense of taste. Although it is not stated in this article, it is hard to miss the metaphor of elevation which is also being deployed in order to give form to our understanding. Not only are the metaphorical senses ordered across the dimension of proximity and distance, (with the access that such proximity entails), and not only are they distinguished in terms of substantiality, with some being easy to grasp whilst others are harder to get a handle on, but they are also arrayed vertically, with some metaphorical sensory modes appearing more elevated than others. Tasting and touching happen locally and at ground level, sight gives us a wider, but less tangible view, and audition (including listening to the sound of silence) extends that view backward and forward and into the future and the past. Shen and Cohen do not make mention of the part played by olfaction in this schema, but it is likely that given the ubiquity of phrases such as ’strong smell’, or ’sharp odor’ demonstrate that it also figures within the overall structure. In these two possible examples the olfactory experience, which has the characteristics of ephemerality and extension which make access difficult, is understood in terms of the tactile, base-level, and proximal senses of strength and sharpness.

Shen, Y. and M. Cohen (1998). “How come silence is sweet but sweetness is not silent: a cognitive account of directionality in poetic synaesthesia.” Language and Literature 7(2): 123-140.

Posted in Cognition, Grasp, Hearing, Knowledge, Metaphor, Proximity, Seeing, Sense, Silence, Smell, Space, Synaesthesia, Taste | 2 Comments »