Mind, meaning and metaphor: the philosophy and psychology of metaphor in 19th-century Germany

Author:Nerlich, B; Clarke, DD

Article Title:Mind, meaning and metaphor: the philosophy and psychology of metaphor in 19th-century Germany

Abstract:
This article explores a German philosophy of metaphor, which proposed a close link between the body and the mind as the basis for metaphor, debunked the view that metaphor is just a decorative rhetorical device and questioned the distinction between the literal and the figurative. This philosophy of metaphor developed at the intersection between a reflection on language and thought and a reflection on the nature of beauty in aesthetics. Thinkers such as Giambattista Vice, Johann Wolf gang von Goethe, Jean Paul and others laid the foundations for this philosophy and it was successively refined by Gustav Gerber, Alfred Biese and Friedrich Nietzsche. It influenced in its turn in various ways the linguistic study of metaphor and the psychology of metaphor as elaborated, for instance, by a lesser-known American scholar, Gertrude Buck. All these thinkers contributed to a philosophy and psychology of the metaphoric according to which metaphors are not only nice, but necessary for the structure and growth of human thought and language. Obvious parallels between this 19th-century philosophy of metaphor and the 20th-century theory of metaphor developed by Lakoff and his followers are examined throughout.

Keywords:  cognition; history; metaphor; philosophy; psychology

DOI: 10.1177/09526950122120952

Source:HISTORY OF THE HUMAN SCIENCES

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