Ben,

Did you read it in the proper order, so to speak (hard to do from the layout)?  
i.e. starting with *my* post and his reply?

I don’t think there’s any doubt that he is replying to, and confirming my 
position – wh. is a general point about how the brain works, and how image 
schemas inform and control many different kinds of action, incl. cognition and 
representation.

It’s true that at almost every point,  Lakoff and his many followers/colleagues 
seek to find computational instantiations of their ideas.

My impression is that these attempts are always misguided – and invite the kind 
of response you have made, – for they do IMO “betray” or certainly distort the 
guiding image schema inspiration – and the idea of mapping schemas onto each 
other. (I’d like to discuss this with him/them – and may use your reply as an 
opportunity).

But I don’t think there can be any doubt that Lakoff & co do see image schemas 
as central as I have outlined (and don’t see them as mathematical) – and that 
while they may seek to be computational, their primary loyalty is to the 
biological and science.

From: Ben Goertzel 
Sent: Monday, July 23, 2012 11:54 PM
To: AGI 
Cc: AGI 
Subject: Re: [agi] Image schemas control all forms of action [Lakoff replies]

Mike,

Lakoff's reply to you is not about "image schema" but rather about "process 
schema" , specifically naranyan's x-schema


naranyan's x-schema are "a graph-based, token-passing formalism based on 
stochastic Petri nets"




http://www1.icsi.berkeley.edu/~snarayan/CFN-NCPW04.pdf 


These x-schema are an abstract mathematical formalism, and not intrinsically 
"imagistic"


Naranyan uses x-schema as a bridge btw language, action, perception and 
reasoning -- much as opencog uses its atomspace model in this role 


Ben G


-- 
Ben Goertzel  
http://goertzel.org

### Sent from my mobile; plz forgive any typos or excessive concision ...

On 24 Jul, 2012, at 5:17 AM, "Mike Tintner" <[email protected]> wrote:




  From: George Lakoff 
  Sent: Monday, July 23, 2012 10:11 PM
  To: Mike Tintner 
  Subject: Re: [Cogling-L] The scope of image schemas

  Narayanan's X-schemas (or process schemas) characterize all events and 
actions and actually control physical actions. So you're right about that. We 
are now working on entity schemas, but we're not there yet. 

  George


  On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 11:34 AM, Mike Tintner <[email protected]> 
wrote:

    Lakoff:The idea behind image metaphors is simple. Images are structured by 
image
    schemas. A given image has multiple image schemas linked via neural binding
    to form a composite image schema ? or more than one. Metaphors map one
    image to another by mapping the source image schemas to the identical image
    schemas in the target

    George,

    Your exposition was v. useful. Can you/should you not extend the scope of 
image schemas? They structure presumably under

    *Images* : both

    *Verbal Images* &
    *Graphic/Photographic/Sensory Images*.

    and not just word images but :

    *Words/Language/Concepts" - period; *all words* are structured by image 
schemas, no?

    And from that one can one go on to argue - no? -  that they structure

    *Moves/Movement* - period - that, for example, our reaching for a cup is 
structured by a schema.

    After all, language is used principally to structure actions: "Hand me that 
cup" - "Go to the other room". It makes sense that image schemas should 
structure not just verbally-mediated action, but all action, however mediated. 
The same mirror neurons that respond to (image-schema-structured) verbal 
accounts of action, also respond when just watching direct sensory images of 
agents executing those actions.

    Concepts/schemas arguably structure all the actions of living creatures.

    Comments?

    P.S. Personally, I think it's helpful to think of image schemas as "[loose] 
outlines" - esp. in connection with actions. Comments?


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