In this instance horse, even painted, is abstraction but not metaphor,
unless it is somehow a symbol for something else - freedom, wealth and so on.
Boris Shoshensky
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: "What is happening during an 'a.e.'?"
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 2010 13:02:00 -0800 (PST)

I'm using the word loosely but still accurately, I believe.  The horse in the
ptg. is an as if horse and the actual horse can be thought of as if it were
painted.  I don't think a metaphor excludes its variable instrumentally for
whatever that instrumentality is, it's also an as-if metaphor.  Endless.

wc

I haven't got a good grasp of how you are using the term "metaphor."
Sometimes
it seems straightforward in the conventional sense of a thing taken as a
symbol or representative of a different kind of thing. I grasp what I think
you mean by its being a word or the sound of a word. But when you say the
horse can be "an object in the middle ground of a landscape," I don't see the
metaphor, I don't see the horse in the middle ground "as if it were something
else." That is using the horse instrumentally, for example, to scale the
scene
and give the viewer a sense of distance and scale, or the tilting of the
terrain.


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