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November 23, 2009
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Arts and Culture

Psychology, Metaphors and You

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Posted on Sep 28, 2009
Colbert and Pinsky
colbertnation.com

This is your brain on metaphors: Stephen Colbert and former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky get ready to rumble during a special “metaphor-off” on “The Colbert Report.”

Can you tell your metaphors from your synecdoches? These terms may trigger bad freshman English flashbacks, but at least when it comes to metaphors, they’re more important than you might think; in fact, they might just be intrinsic to how you think.  —KA

The Boston Globe via Arts & Letters Daily:

Now, however, a new group of people has started to take an intense interest in metaphors: psychologists. Drawing on philosophy and linguistics, cognitive scientists have begun to see the basic metaphors that we use all the time not just as turns of phrase, but as keys to the structure of thought. By taking these everyday metaphors as literally as possible, psychologists are upending traditional ideas of how we learn, reason, and make sense of the world around us. The result has been a torrent of research testing the links between metaphors and their physical roots, with many of the papers reading as if they were commissioned by Amelia Bedelia, the implacably literal-minded children’s book hero. Researchers have sought to determine whether the temperature of an object in someone’s hands determines how “warm” or “cold” he considers a person he meets, whether the heft of a held object affects how “weighty” people consider topics they are presented with, or whether people think of the powerful as physically more elevated than the less powerful.

What they have found is that, in fact, we do. Metaphors aren’t just how we talk and write, they’re how we think. At some level, we actually do seem to understand temperament as a form of temperature, and we expect people’s personalities to behave accordingly. What’s more, without our body’s instinctive sense for temperature—or position, texture, size, shape, or weight—abstract concepts like kindness and power, difficulty and purpose, and intimacy and importance would simply not make any sense to us. Deep down, we are all Amelia Bedelia.

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Here, Stephen Colbert, Sean Penn and renowned poet Robert Pinsky make a strong case for the paramount importance of the metaphor in this classic “Colbert Report” clip:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Meta-Free-Phor-All: Shall I Nail Thee to a Summer’s Day?
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By KDelphi, September 29 at 3:34 pm #

Words do matter alot. Ask Frank Luntz of FOX News. And “liberals” tend to be terrible at it.

I am not certain that the article and the Colbert show are actually saying the same thing. But it was cute enough.

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By Tokin Lib, September 28 at 10:29 pm #

Metaphors We live By (1984)

Lakoff & Johnson

Yeah, that Lakoff

everybody who has read humanities for the last 25 years knows the book.

chuy…

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By Jean Gerard, September 28 at 7:52 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Meta-phor—from Greek, meta = along with, among, behind, after,  +  from Greek, phore = part bearing something
  So what is a meta for?  If you catch my drift, we are at sea, in a sinking ship called “language” along with huge waves of words like “war” and"kill” and “megaton” and “block buster” and “fire power” and “weapons of mass destruction”—metaphors meaning certain death.  These metaphors are overwhelming us.
  There is no safe shore in sight so we are going to have to work together to start using a different language containing more words like “love” and “understand” and “sympathize” and “learn” and “think.” This is the language that bears part of the meaning of life,along with words like “patience” and “endurance, “share” and “save” and “help.”
  This is the language of the future, and must be translated into action if it is to have any real meaning. (I started out trying to be funny, but decided this is a quite serious matter after all.)

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