Lakoff & Johnson Readers of Blumenberg? The Similarities Between Metaphorology and Metaphor Conceptual Theory

Authors

  • Stefania Garello University of Palermo
  • Marco Carapezza University of Palermo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13135/2385-1945/7190

Abstract

This paper aims at showing the analogies between Hans Blumenberg’s Metaphorology and George Lakoff & Mark Johnson’s Conceptual Metaphor Theory. Starting from the analysis of the proportion for which ABSOLUTE METAPHOR: METAPHORICAL EXPRESSIONS = BACKGROUND METAPHOR: CONCEPTUAL METAPHOR, we propose to compare Blumenberg’s Metaphorology with Lakoff & Johnson’s Conceptual Metaphor Theory, outlining similarities and differences in reference to: (a) the fundamental notions on which the two theories are based, (b) the methods and (c) the relationship between language-thought-culture assumed by the two theories. However, the reconstruction of the relation between the two theoretical paradigms is not an end in itself as we will show that the two research paradigms could be integrated to overcome problematic aspects present in both theoretical perspectives.

Author Biographies

Stefania Garello, University of Palermo

PhD student in Philosophy of Language at the University of Palermo. In her research project she aims to develop, through the tools offered by theoretical pragmatics, a deflationary perspective on metaphor.

Marco Carapezza, University of Palermo

Full Professor of Philosophy of Language at the University of Palermo. His research focuses on the linguistic dimension inherent in human cognition, a subject he has dealt with through different lines of research: studies on Wittgenstein; Embodied Cognition; analyses of artistic practices.

Published

2022-10-15

How to Cite

Garello, S., & Carapezza, M. (2022). Lakoff & Johnson Readers of Blumenberg? The Similarities Between Metaphorology and Metaphor Conceptual Theory. Philosophy Kitchen - Journal of Contemporary Philosophy, (17), 123–133. https://doi.org/10.13135/2385-1945/7190

Issue

Section

II. Through Experience and Thought