Steve,

 

You wrote:

 

I think there is a significant difference between figurative speech 

inside and outside of scientific thought.   Perhaps there could/should 

be a more rigorous boundary put between the two... the former being more what 
is colloquially thought of as metaphor and the latter being more what is 
thought of as "formal analogy".

 

Isn’t this the very boundary we are exploring?   I would assert that, to the 
extent that we fail to explore it, we drain the life blood of science and 
deprive poetry of its precision. 

 

Nick

 

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Steven A Smith
Sent: Monday, June 12, 2017 2:05 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] tools, trollers, and language

 

Nick -

 

To try to offer my own understanding of Glen's position/assertion... I (like 
you) believe that his mere *invocation* of an onion in this context had a 
metaphorical quality to it, but his *emphasis* was in investigating the natural 
delimiters (?EricS term?) of a specific example of an object which might be 
analyzed in terms of "layer" or "level" where he claimed (and asked us to 
acknowledge?) that there is a 

distinct difference and the former is much more apt than the latter.   

Of course, I could be wrong (again) and Glen may well make that point if it is 
important!

 

Your analysis of metaphor more in figurative, romantic speech/poesy

(Love/Rose) is good and parallels what Glen was maundering most recently 
(again, GEPR correct me if I misapprehended!) regarding the responsibility of 
the speaker and the listener.  As a poet and lover of poetry and poems and 
poesy and ring around the rosy myself,  I think it is good and important that 
in those modes, that there be multiple entendres galore (and what is the French 
for multiple apprehensions to 

complement entendres?).   The good and juicy stuff lies in the various 

(mis)interpretations of the original intent, up to and including subconscious 
intents not acknowledged by the figurative writer.

 

I think there is a significant difference between figurative speech 

inside and outside of scientific thought.   Perhaps there could/should 

be a more rigorous boundary put between the two... the former being more what 
is colloquially thought of as metaphor and the latter being more what is 
thought of as "formal analogy".

 

I based most of my career on helping literal thinkers access their intuitions 
through the use of complex metaphors.  I think that was 

important.   I also saw metaphors used very effectively for 

communicating complex scientific ideas to a lay audience.

 

Glen is unfortunately accurate (in my experience) that it is also easy 

to use metaphor to obscure and/or muddle discussions.   I think there 

was some of that afoot with our attempts to get at "what is complexity" 

(the root of this branching labyrinth of topics?) but I also believe that Glen 
(and many others in this group) may be a bit allergic to the abuses of 
metaphorical language.

 

You can beat a dead metaphor, but you can't lead it to water.

 

- Steve

 

 

On 6/12/17 11:48 AM, Nick Thompson wrote:

> But Glen, if the onion was not a metaphor, then what was it?  How did it 
> become relevant?  A mongoose and a rutabaga are also things that can be 
> "sliced up, analysed..." etc, but you did not mention those.  You did not 
> offer a rutabaga model of complexity; you offered an onion one.  Is there 
> some OTHER  "process of mind" other than metaphor-making that gets you from 
> complexity to onions?

> 

> I am thinking about your worry that we over-deploy the notion of metaphor.  
> How about the following rule of thumb:  M is a metaphor for T when our 
> understandings of M ae offered as potential understandings of T.  So, a 
> metaphor can always be cashed out as follows:  What does the metaphor-maker 
> understand about M that s/he takes to be relevant to our understanding of T.

> 

> One of the fierce debates that we have had in my group over the years has 
> been over the question of who gets to say what the implications of a metaphor 
> ARE.  "My love is like a red, red rose" could imply that she is frail, 
> ephemeral, sweet smelling, gaudy, thorny, or all of the above.  Who gets to 
> say which of these entailments applies.  For those of us who think that 
> metaphor-making is at the core of scientific thought, the question is an 
> important one.   We all of us agree that a metaphor-maker is entitled to 
> disclaim some of the implications of his/her metaphor; but to what extent is 
> s/he entitled to cherry-pick.  And we all agree that once a metaphor-maker 
> has specified which entailments are essential to his understanding of his 
> metaphor, he is stuck with them.  A proper scientific metaphor must be 
> falsifiable.

> 

> Nick

> 

> Nicholas S. Thompson

> Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University 

>  <http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/> 
> http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

> 

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Friam [ <mailto:[email protected]> 
> mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of glen ?

> Sent: Monday, June 12, 2017 12:45 PM

> To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 

> < <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] tools, trollers, and language

> 

> Just to clarify, no, that's not at all what I did.  I did not propose 

> onion as a source and layer as a target.  That completely misses my 

> point.  An onion is a thing that can be sliced up, thought about, 

> analyzed, by various different methods.  No metaphor involved.  This 

> tendency to see metaphors everywhere is a strange disease we're 

> inflicted with. 8^)

> 

> 

> On 06/12/2017 09:39 AM, Steven A Smith wrote:

>> In the example at hand,  Glen invoked "an Onion" as the /source/ domain in a 
>> metaphor to try to understand the more general and abstract target domain of 
>> /layer/.  Other /source/ domains (deposition layers, skin, geology) were 
>> offered as well to offer conceptual parallax on this.

> --

> ☣ glen

> 

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