The structure of our concepts: A critical assessment of Conceptual Metaphor Theory as a theory of concepts

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Peer F. Bundgaard
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Abstract George Lakoff and Mark Johnson’s Conceptual Metaphor Theory is by and large a theory of what (abstract) concepts are, how they are structured, and how this structure is acquired — i.e., by mapping of structure from one more concrete or sensory-motor specific domain to another more abstract domain. Conceptual metaphors therefore rest on “cross-domain mappings.” The claims to the effect that our abstract concepts are metaphorically structured and that cross-domain mappings constitute one of the fundamental cognitive meaning-making processes are empirical and can therefore be put to the test. In this paper, I will critically assess Conceptual Metaphor Theory as a theory of concepts in light of recent experimental findings. Many such findings provide evidence for the psychological reality of cross-domain mappings, i.e., that structure activated in one domain actually can perform cognitive tasks carried out in another domain. They do not, however, support the claim that the structure of our (abstract) concepts is still metaphorical, as Lakoff and Johnson claim — that is to say, that our mind actually does perform cross-domain mappings when we process conventional conceptual metaphors such as “Death is Rest” or “Love is a Journey.” Two conclusions can be drawn from this: (1) it is necessary to distinguish between cross-domain mappings (which are psychologically real) and the metaphoric structure of our concepts (which is not, in the sense that such concepts do not any longer activate cross-domain mappings when processed); (2) Conceptual Metaphor Theory is not an adequate theory of concepts. I will therefore sketch another more viable theory of concepts where the structure of our concepts is defined as the full ecology of their situations of use, which includes the kind of situations (objects, agents, interactions) they apply to and the kind of emotional, cognitive, bodily, and behavioral responses they elicit. On this view, the contents of our concepts are to be considered as vague predicates, with vague extensions, which take on a specific form in their situation of use.
概念的结构:对概念隐喻理论作为概念理论的批判性评价
乔治·拉科夫和马克·约翰逊的概念隐喻理论大体上是一个关于(抽象)概念是什么,它们是如何构成的,以及这种结构是如何获得的理论——也就是说,通过将结构从一个更具体的或感觉运动特定的领域映射到另一个更抽象的领域。因此,概念隐喻依赖于“跨域映射”。我们的抽象概念是隐喻性结构的,跨领域映射构成了基本的认知意义形成过程之一,这种说法是经验性的,因此可以加以检验。在本文中,我将根据最近的实验结果批判性地评估概念隐喻理论作为一种概念理论。许多这样的发现为跨域映射的心理真实性提供了证据,即在一个域中激活的结构实际上可以执行在另一个域中执行的认知任务。然而,他们并不支持我们的(抽象)概念的结构仍然是隐喻的说法,正如Lakoff和Johnson所声称的那样——也就是说,当我们处理传统的概念隐喻,如“死亡是休息”或“爱是一次旅行”时,我们的大脑实际上确实进行了跨域映射。由此可以得出两个结论:(1)有必要区分跨领域映射(这是心理上真实的)和我们概念的隐喻结构(这不是,从这个意义上说,这些概念在处理时不再激活跨领域映射);(2)概念隐喻理论不是一个充分的概念理论。因此,我将概述另一个更可行的概念理论,其中我们的概念结构被定义为它们使用情境的完整生态,其中包括它们所适用的情境类型(对象、代理、互动)以及它们所引发的情感、认知、身体和行为反应。根据这种观点,我们的概念的内容应该被认为是模糊的谓词,具有模糊的外延,在它们的使用情况中具有特定的形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Cognitive Semiotics
Cognitive Semiotics Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
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