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Metaphors we live by

Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Mark Johnson (1980)

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  1. An Embodied Tutoring System for Literal vs. Metaphorical Concepts.Marietta Sionti, Thomas Schack & Yiannis Aloimonos - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:365590.
    • In this paper we combine motion captured data with linguistic notions in a game-like intelligent tutoring system, in order to help elementary school students to better differentiate literal from metaphorical uses of motion verbs, based on embodied information. In addition to the thematic goal, we intend to improve young students’ attention and spatiotemporal memory, by presenting sensorimotor data experimentally collected from thirty two participants in our motion capturing labs. Furthermore, we examine the accomplishment of game’s goals and compare them (...)
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  • Learning to Live with Osteoporosis: A Metaphoric Narrative.Richard Hovey & Robert Craig - 2012 - Journal of Applied Hermeneutics 2012 (1).
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  • “Just do your job”: technology, bureaucracy, and the eclipse of conscience in contemporary medicine.Jacob A. Blythe & Farr A. Curlin - 2018 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 39 (6):431-452.
    Market metaphors have come to dominate discourse on medical practice. In this essay, we revisit Peter Berger and colleagues’ analysis of modernization in their book The Homeless Mind and place that analysis in conversation with Max Weber’s 1917 lecture “Science as a Vocation” to argue that the rise of market metaphors betokens the carry-over to medical practice of various features from the institutions of technological production and bureaucratic administration. We refer to this carry-over as the product presumption. The product presumption (...)
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  • Realismo Pragmático.Hasok Chang - 2016 - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaíso 8:107.
    En este trabajo intento articular y desarrollar la defensa que Roberto Torretti hace del realismo pragmático. En el núcleo de la visión de Torretti existe un rechazo a la idea de que la verdad de las teorías científicas consista en su correspondencia con el mundo. Propongo entonces entender la correspondencia como una noción metafórica. Articularé una noción de coherencia pragmática sobre la cual establezco una nueva teoría de la coherencia entre verdad y realidad. En consecuencia, resultará posible afirmar que el (...)
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  • CRISPR as agent: a metaphor that rhetorically inhibits the prospects for responsible research.Leah Ceccarelli - 2018 - Life Sciences, Society and Policy 14 (1):1-13.
    In 2015, a group of 18 scientists and bioethicists published an editorial in Science calling for “open discourse on the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology to manipulate the human genome” and recommending that steps be taken to strongly discourage “any attempts at germline genome modification” in humans with this powerful new technology. Press reports compared the essay to a letter written by Paul Berg and 10 other scientists in 1974, also published in Science, calling for a voluntary deferral of certain types (...)
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  • Placing Abstract Concepts in Space: Quantity, Time and Emotional Valence.Greg Woodin & Bodo Winter - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Variedades de la explicación en evo-devo.María Alejandra Petino Zappala & Sergio Daniel Barberis - 2018 - Epistemologia E Historia de la Ciencia 3 (1):18-31.
    The aim of this paper lies in characterizing the explanations and models used in the field of evolutionary developmental biology throughout its history. While manipulative experiments in controlled conditions have been useful to set the bases of the discipline and are still routinely performed, this approach supposes a tension between the reliability and the representativity of the conclusions. Given the recent changes in the understanding of evolutionary phenomena, different authors currently emphasize the need of avoiding excessive simplifications in experimental approaches, (...)
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  • Motor intentionality and the intentionality of improvisation: a contribution to a phenomenology of musical improvisation.Lucia Angelino - 2018 - Continental Philosophy Review 52 (2):203-224.
    The intentionality of improvisation represents surely one of the most pressing and controversial issues in contemporary action theory: how do we find the way to characterize the proper intentionality of improvisation, which is an unplanned yet intentional action? This article will address this question bringing together Merleau-Ponty’s motor intentionality and Bergson’s conception of duration. My argument will unfold in three main stages. First, I will briefly describe the traditional scheme that is used to think of intentional action in contemporary action (...)
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  • Word meaning.Luca Gasparri & Diego Marconi - 2015 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • A philosophical investigation in machine understanding. The case of implicit meaning.Maria Wilkowska - 2013 - Semina Scientiarum 12:83-96.
    The question of machine thinking and understanding, once initiated by Alan Turing, has puzzled scholars from various disciplines. This paper aims at investigating some of the facets involved in the topic of machine language understanding with particular interest devoted to indirect meaning comprehension. So far as the subject under examination – the chatbot – manages to understand directly conveyed information, still much is to be done with respect to implicit data in which everyday messages abound. This situation generates a number (...)
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  • Theory and Empiricism of Religious Evolution (THERE): Foundation of a Research Program (Part 2).Volkhard Krech - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 26 (2):215-263.
    This two-part article presents the research program for a theory and empirical analysis of religious evolution. It is assumed that religion isprimarilya co-evolution to societal evolution, which in turn is a co-evolution to mental, organic, and physical evolution. The theory of evolution is triangulated with the systems theory and the semiotically informed theory of communication, so that knowledge can be gained that would not be acquired by only one of the three theories: The differentiation between religion and its environment can (...)
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  • ‘I shall prosecute a ruthless war on these monsters … ’: a critical metaphor analysis of discourse of resistance in the rhetoric of Kwame Nkrumah.Mark Nartey - 2018 - Critical Discourse Studies 16 (2):113-130.
    ABSTRACTIn recent years, studies on discourses of resistance in politics have become prevalent, focusing mainly on the language of radical movements and rebel groups, but not the discourses on colonialism, imperialism, and repression which can be considered as potential sites for discourses of resistance. To fill this gap, this paper critically explores how an independence leader utilized metaphor to construct a discourse of resistance against colonialism and imperialism. It analyzes a number of speeches delivered by Kwame Nkrumah, a pioneering Pan-African (...)
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  • Variability in the Alignment of Number and Space Across Languages and Tasks.Andrea Bender, Annelie Rothe-Wulf & Sieghard Beller - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Exploring the Potential of Concept Associations for the Creative Generation of Linguistic Artifacts: A Case Study With Riddles and Rhetorical Figures.Virginia Francisco, Raquel Hervás, Gonzalo Méndez & Paloma Galván - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • A Dual Mechanism of Cognition and Emotion in Processing Moral-Vertical Metaphors.Dongxue Zhai, Yaling Guo & Zhongyi Lu - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Filosofía, filosofía de las ciencias Y la cuestión Del realismo.Marcelo Díaz Soto - 2018 - Alpha (Osorno) 46:199-214.
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  • Who are the users of synthetic DNA? Using metaphors to activate microorganisms at the center of synthetic biology.Erika Amethyst Szymanski - 2018 - Life Sciences, Society and Policy 14 (1):1-16.
    Synthetic biology, a multidisciplinary field involving designing and building with DNA, often designs and builds in microorganisms. The role of these microorganisms tends to be understood through metaphors making the microbial cell like a machine and emphasizing its passivity: cells are described as platforms, chassis, and computers. Here, I point to the efficacy of such metaphors in enacting the microorganism as a particular kind of participant in the research process, and I suggest the utility of employing metaphors that make microorganisms (...)
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  • Leaving gift-giving behind: the ethical status of the human body and transplant medicine.Paweł Łuków - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 22 (2):221-230.
    The paper argues that the idea of gift-giving and its associated imagery, which has been founding the ethics of organ transplants since the time of the first successful transplants, should be abandoned because it cannot effectively block arguments for markets in human body parts. The imagery suggests that human bodies or their parts are transferable objects which belong to individuals. Such imagery is, however, neither a self-evident nor anthropologically unproblematic construal of the relation between a human being and their body. (...)
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  • Ignorance-Preserving Mental Models Thought Experiments as Abductive Metaphors.Selene Arfini, Claudia Casadio & Lorenzo Magnani - 2019 - Foundations of Science 24 (2):391-409.
    In this paper, we aim at explaining the relevance of thought experiments in philosophy and the history of science by describing them as particular instances of two categories of creative thinking: metaphorical reasoning and abductive cognition. As a result of this definition, we will claim that TEs hold an ignorance-preserving trait that is evidenced in both TEs inferential structure and in the process of scenario creation they presuppose. Elaborating this thesis will allow us to explain the wonder that philosophers of (...)
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  • Emotions and the Body in Early Modern Medicine.Michael Stolberg - 2019 - Emotion Review 11 (2):113-122.
    Drawing on Latin treatises, letters, and autobiographical writings, this article outlines the changes in the—thoroughly somatic—learned medical understanding of the emotions (or “affectus/passiones...
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  • The process en route: the metaphor of the journey as the dominant narrative for the political discourse in Catalonia.Carlota M. Moragas-Fernández, Marta Montagut Calvo & Arantxa Capdevila Gómez - 2018 - Critical Discourse Studies 15 (5):517-539.
    ABSTRACTPolitical actors use metaphor in their speeches in order to frame political issues [Charteris-Black, J.. Politicians and rhetoric: The persuasive power of metaphor. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan]. If they succeed in imposing a particular frame, especially when there is no agreement on the definition of certain political issues, this can become the prevailing way for referring to that issue [Semino, E.. Metaphor in discourse. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press]. In this research, we argue that this was the case for the metaphor of (...)
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  • Reverse Engineering Complex Cultural Concepts: Identifying Building Blocks of “Religion”.Ann Taves - 2015 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 15 (1-2):191-216.
    Researchers have not yet done an adequate job of reverse engineering the complex cultural concepts of religion and spirituality in a way that allows scientists to operationalize component parts and historians of religion to consider how the component parts have been synthesized into larger socio-cultural wholes. Doing so involves two steps: distinguishing between the generic elements that structure definitions and the specific features used to characterize the generic elements as “religious” or “sacred” and disaggregating these specific features into more basic (...)
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  • Deus Ex Machina: Technological Experience as a Cognitive Resource in Bronze Age Conceptualizations of Astronomical Phenomena.Niels Johannsen - 2014 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 14 (5):435-448.
    Mental recruitment of previous technological experience in conceptualizations of non-technological phenomena constitutes a specific kind of unintended cognitive effect of human technological activity. This paper discusses particular conceptual takes on a significant epistemic challenge faced by people in the Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean: that of understanding the factors and dynamics governing and allowing the most important celestial body to travel across the sky during the day. Textual sources, iconography and artefactual evidence in combination provide an outline of concrete conceptual solutions (...)
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  • Temporal Frames of Reference: Conceptual Analysis and Empirical Evidence from German, English, Mandarin Chinese and Tongan.Andrea Bender, Sieghard Beller & Giovanni Bennardo - 2010 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 10 (3-4):283-307.
    Despite a close correspondence between spatial and temporal cognition, empirical approaches to the two domains have used distinct theoretical conceptions: frames of reference for the former, and moving perspectives and reference-point metaphors for the latter. Our analysis reveals that these conceptions can ‐ and should ‐ be related more closely to each other. Mapping spatial frames of reference onto temporal relations, we obtain a taxonomy that allows us to distinguish more types of referencing than existing conceptions do and that is (...)
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  • Analysing political speeches: rhetoric, discourse and metaphor.Kate Budd - 2014 - Critical Discourse Studies 13 (1):139-141.
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  • The politics of fear vs. the politics of hope: analysing the 2015 Greek election and referendum campaigns.Salomi Boukala & Dimitra Dimitrakopoulou - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (1):39-55.
    ABSTRACTThis paper deals with the discursive construction of in-groups and out-groups through a politics of fear and a politics of hope. It draws on the 2015 Greek election and referendum campaigns of the two main political parties – the radical left Syriza and the conservative New Democracy – and emphasises how they legitimised their political decisions via these two forms of politics. The Greek bailout referendum took place on 5 July 2015 in a climate of polarisation and insecurity. We assume (...)
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  • Ecolinguistics: language, ecology and the stories we live by.Robert Poole - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (5):571-574.
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  • Floods, waves, and surges: the representation of Latin@ immigrant children in the United States mainstream media.Megan Strom & Emily Alcock - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (4):440-457.
    ABSTRACTDuring the 2014 fiscal year, the United States saw a dramatic increase in Latin@ child immigration in hopes of parent–child reunification. The United States mainstream media reacted by reporting heavily on the child arrivals during the summer of 2014. The current study follows a Critical Discourse Studies approach to unveil the ideologies communicated through this media coverage by analyzing the lexical and grammatical representation of Latin@ immigrant children in two of the most read newspapers nationwide: The New York Times and (...)
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  • Semioticizing capitalism in corporate brand enactment: The case of singapore's corporatized universities.Carl Jon Way Ng - 2014 - Critical Discourse Studies 11 (2):139-157.
    Corporate organizations, in their corporate branding efforts, often associate or imbue themselves with values and attributes like dynamism, competitiveness and empowerment, which are reflective of post-Fordist, neoliberal capitalist ideology. This article examines how such values are semioticized by a particular group of organizations – Singapore's corporatized universities – as they enact their corporate brands both verbally and visually, specifically through metaphor and modality. In doing so, these organizations and their corporate brands are conceived of as nodes of neoliberal governmentality, where (...)
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  • Networked identities: Changing representations of europeanness.Lisa McEntee-Atalianis & Franco Zappettini - 2014 - Critical Discourse Studies 11 (4):397-415.
    Transnational dynamics have significantly changed established notions of communities and belonging. Transnational perspectives however remain marginal in research on European identities which has typically conceptualised the latter as emerging from and relying on essential national referents. Drawing on data derived from members of a transnational organisation promoting civic participation in Europe, this paper challenges existing representations of Europeanness by offering a new interpretive metaphor of networked identities. Findings suggest that through this schema members are able to construct and reimagine their (...)
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  • Beyond space and time: Temporal and geographical configurations in us national security discourse.Patricia L. Dunmire - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 12 (3):297-312.
    This article examines the ‘deictic signature’ of the discourse worlds that are projected through representations of the Cold War and post-Cold War global security environments. I focus on the means by which US national security discourse creates ‘threat environments’ through historically specific renderings of the spatial configuration of global society and projections of the future. Specifically, I examine how the ‘powerhouse’ metaphor embedded within Henry Luce's conception of the ‘American Century', as well as the national security approach it implicated have (...)
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  • Re-contextualizing political discourse: An analysis of shifting spaces in songs used as a political tool.Laura Filardo-Llamas - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 12 (3):279-296.
    This article intends to build bridges between two recent trends within Critical Discourse Studies as exemplified by cognitive linguistics and multimodality. Thus, the postulates of spatial cognition will be followed to do an analysis of the musical re-contextualization of Barack Obama's New Hampshire 2008 speech. In Will.i.am's music video ‘Yes, we can’, uploaded on YouTube under the username WeCan08, we can listen to a song whose lyrics are made of different extracts from Obama's speech. This type of communicative strategy results (...)
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  • Viewpoint in linguistic discourse: Space and evaluation in news reports of political protests.Christopher Hart - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 12 (3):238-260.
    This paper continues to develop a programme of research which has recently emerged investigating the ideological functions of spatial construals in social and political discourse from a Cognitive Linguistic perspective. Specifically, inspired by principles in Cognitive Grammar, the paper attempts to formulate a grammar of ‘point of view’ and show how this trans-modal cognitive system is manifested in the meanings of individual grammatical constructions which, when selected in discourse, yield mental representations whose spatial properties invite ideological evaluations. The link between (...)
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  • Metaphors we believe by: Islamic doctrine as evoked by the Prophet Muhammad's metaphors.Ahmad El-Sharif - 2012 - Critical Discourse Studies 9 (3):231-245.
    Metaphorical language has an ideological function that needs to be investigated. In this paper, I show how some of the prophetic metaphors are deliberately used to represent a well-defined statement of beliefs that constructs Islamic doctrine based on early Arabs’ beliefs and experiential knowledge. This statement is represented in terms of metaphors from the metaphoric domains of journeying, the heart, slavery or servitude, brotherhood, shepherds, and light.
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  • The study of metaphor as part of critical discourse analysis.Andreas Musolff - 2012 - Critical Discourse Studies 9 (3):301-310.
    This article discusses how the study of metaphoric and more generally, figurative language use contributes to critical discourse analysis. It shows how cognitive linguists’ recognition of metaphor as a fundamental means of concept- and argument-building can add to CDA's account of meaning constitution in the social context. It then discusses discrepancies between the early model of conceptual metaphor theory and empirical data and argues that discursive-pragmatic factors as well as sociolinguistic variation have to be taken into account in order to (...)
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  • The ideologies behind newspaper crime reports of Latinos and Wall Street/CEOs: a critical analysis of metonymy in text and image.Theresa Catalano & Linda R. Waugh - 2013 - Critical Discourse Studies 10 (4):406-426.
    This study illustrates how metonymy in image and text work together to produce dominant ideologies in US media discourse, through careful, multidisciplinary analysis of over 25 articles in online US newspapers from the years 2004 to 2011 that reported crimes committed by Wall Street/ceos and Latino migrants. Using critical discourse analysis/studies, multimodal analysis, and cognitive linguistic frameworks, we examine examples of metonymy, which combine to negatively ‘Other’ Latinos and produce positive representations of Wall Street/ceos. While work in critical metaphor analysis (...)
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  • Hybrid genres and the cognitive positioning of audiences in the political discourse of Hizbollah.Dany Badran - 2010 - Critical Discourse Studies 7 (3):191-201.
    This paper aims at providing a better understanding of the workings of political rhetoric in the discourse of Hizbollah by examining relatively underexplored socio-cognitive dimensions in production and reception of political speeches. It argues for the centrality of the macro-linguistic textual notion of hybrid genres to the understanding of the socio-cultural makeup of speaker–audience relations and dynamics. The adequateness and uniqueness of the Lebanese, and by extension, the Middle-Eastern context are more clearly evident in the overwhelming dominance of dogmatic discourses (...)
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  • Framing discourse on the environment, a critical discourse approach, by Richard J. Alexander.M. Cristina Caimotto - 2011 - Critical Discourse Studies 8 (3):227-229.
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  • Collision of language in news discourse: a functional–cognitive perspective on transitivity.Juan Li - 2011 - Critical Discourse Studies 8 (3):203-219.
    Adopting a functional–cognitive perspective of Halliday's transitivity model, this article examines the processes of ideological constructions within The New York Times and China Daily in their reports of an air collision between the USA and China in April 2001. The analysis shows that discourses surrounding the collision circulating in the two newspapers construct different understandings of the event which are shaped by the specific political position, interests, and priorities of each government regarding the collision. Through analyzing specific choices of process (...)
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  • Critical discourse analysis and metaphor: toward a theoretical framework.Christopher Hart - 2008 - Critical Discourse Studies 5 (2):91-106.
    Critical discourse analysis explores the role of discourse structures in constituting social inequality. Metaphorical structure, however, has received relatively little attention in explicit CDA. The paper aims to redress this by developing a coherent theoretical framework for CDA and metaphor. This framework adopts conceptual blending theory over conceptual metaphor theory, where the latter is perceived to be incompatible with CDA. The framework is applied in a CDA of metaphors for nation and immigration in the British National Party's 2005 general election (...)
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  • The media and the pursuit of militarism in Japan: Newspaper editorials in the aftermath of 9/11.Scott Saft & Yumiko Ohara - 2006 - Critical Discourse Studies 3 (1):81-101.
    Following the attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001, Japan passed laws that resulted in the dispatch of its Self-Defense Force to support military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq. This marked a major break from Japan's previous pacifist stance, which, as stated in Article 9 of the national constitution, did not allow for participation in war. This article examines editorials from four leading Japanese newspapers, Yomiuri, Asahi, Mainichi, and Sankei, to explore a connection between language usage in the (...)
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  • The other closet?: Atheists, homosexuals and the lateral appropriation of discursive capital.Whitney Anspach, Kevin Coe & Crispin Thurlow - 2007 - Critical Discourse Studies 4 (1):95-119.
    Previous studies have considered different forms of economic and/or cultural appropriation between status-unequal groups, for example young, White, middle-class people cashing in on the music of urban, African-American culture. In this paper, however, we are interested in what we call ‘lateral appropriation’, the process whereby the discursive capital of one marginalized group is usurped by another similarly marginalized group. In particular, drawing illustrative data from a number of organizational websites, we examine the atheist movement's remetaphorized use of the homosexual ‘closet’ (...)
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  • Critical discourse studies: where to from here?Bernard McKenna - 2004 - Critical Discourse Studies 1 (1):9-39.
    This paper surveys critical discourse studies to the present and claims that, to avoid lapsing into comfortable orthodoxy in its mature phase, CDS needs to reassert its transformative radical teleology. The initial part of the paper reasserts the need for a strong social theory given the materialist and context-bound nature of discourse in daily activity. From this basis, the paper then characterizes the “new times” in which contemporary discourse occurs, and briefly surveys those issues typically analyzed, namely political economy, race (...)
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  • Analysing Political Discourse: Toward a cognitive approach.Christopher Hart, Betsy Rymes, Mariana Souto-Manning, Cati Brown & Allan Luke - 2005 - Critical Discourse Studies 2 (2):189-201.
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  • This “Modern Epidemic”: Loneliness as an Emotion Cluster and a Neglected Subject in the History of Emotions.Fay Bound Alberti - 2018 - Emotion Review 10 (3):242-254.
    Loneliness is one of the most neglected aspects of emotion history, despite claims that the 21st century is the loneliest ever. This article argues against the widespread belief that modern-day loneliness is inevitable, negative, and universal. Looking at its language and etymology, it suggests that loneliness needs to be understood firstly as an “emotion cluster” composed of a variety of affective states, and secondly as a relatively recent invention, dating from around 1800. Loneliness can be positive, and as much a (...)
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  • The Understanding of Visual Metaphors by the Congenitally Blind.Ricardo A. Minervino, Alejandra Martín, L. Micaela Tavernini & Máximo Trench - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • When the Sad Past Is Left: The Mental Metaphors Between Time, Valence, and Space.Nicolas Spatola, Julio Santiago, Brice Beffara, Martial Mermillod, Ludovic Ferrand & Marc Ouellet - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Metaphor Comprehension in Schizophrenic Patients.Ileana Rossetti, Paolo Brambilla & Costanza Papagno - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Manipulative imagination: how to move things around in mathematics.Valeria Giardino - 2018 - Theoria : An International Journal for Theory, History and Fundations of Science 33 (2):345-360.
    In the first part of the paper, previous work about embodied mathematics and the practice of topology will be presented. According to the proposed view, in order to become experts, topologists have to learn how to use manipulative imagination: representations are cognitive tools whose functioning depends from pre-existing cognitive abilities and from specific training. In the second part of the paper, the notion of imagination as “make-believe” is discussed to give an account of cognitive tools in mathematics as props; to (...)
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  • Praxis matemática: reflexiones sobre la cognición que la hace posible.Rafael Núñez - 2018 - Theoria : An International Journal for Theory, History and Fundations of Science 33 (2):271-283.
    Mathematics is a unique body of knowledge. Among others, it is abstract, exact, efficient, symbolizable, and it provides astonishing applications to the real world. In the domain of philosophy of mathematics the study of the practice of mathematics has gradually become an important area of investigation. What aspects of the human body and mind make the peculiar practice of mathematics possible? In this article, I briefly review some cogntive dimensions that play a crucial role in the creation and consolidation of (...)
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