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Metaphors we live by

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

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  1. Book review: Christopher Hart (ed.), Critical Discourse Studies in Context and Cognition. [REVIEW]Will Lingle - 2013 - Discourse and Communication 7 (4):462-464.
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  • A Study of Body Metaphors in Philosophy.Cao Lin & Chen Hongjun - 2022 - Philosophy Study 12 (3).
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  • Li Zhi 李難, Confucianism and The viritue of Desire.Pauline C. Lee - 2012 - SUNY Press.
    A philosophical analysis of the work of one of the most iconoclastic thinkers in Chinese history, Li Zhi, whose ethics prized spontaneous expression of genuine feelings.
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  • “It’s All Just a Game”: How Victims of Rape Invoke the Game Metaphor to Add Meaning and Create Agency in Relation to Legal Trials.Solveig Laugerud - 2020 - Feminist Legal Studies 28 (3):257-275.
    Metaphors are common in legal discourse because they reify abstract legal concepts. The game metaphor, sometimes used to characterise legal trials, tends to be associated with legal professionals’ work in court. This metaphor portrays a legal trial as a competitive, hostile and masculine process that excludes victims from participating in the trial. In this article, I analyse interviews with victims of rape who have had their case prosecuted in the courts in Norway. The victims use the game metaphor to characterise (...)
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  • Justice ‘Under’ Law: The Bodily Incarnation of Legal Conceptions Over Time.Stefan Larsson - 2014 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 27 (4):613-626.
    The article uses embodiment and the experiential basis of conceptual metaphor to argue for the metaphorical essence of abstract legal thought.concepts like ‘law’ and ‘justice’ need to borrow from a spatial, bodily, or physical prototype in order to be conceptualised, seen, for example, in the fact that justice preferably is found ‘under’ law. Three conceptual categories of how law is conceptualised is examined: law as an object, law as a vertical relation, and law as an area. The Google Ngram Viewer, (...)
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  • Using Metaphor Theory to Examine Conceptions of Energy in Biology, Chemistry, and Physics.Rachael Lancor - 2014 - Science & Education 23 (6):1245-1267.
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  • Wozu Postkolonialismus, Diskurstheorie und Religionsästhetik?: Überlegungen zu ihrem Nutzen für die religionsgeschichtliche Forschung.Isabel Laack - 2021 - Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 29 (2):186-215.
    Zusammenfassung In der Debatte um die Integrität der Religionswissenschaft verteidigen einige Autoren angesichts der Dominanz metatheoretischer Reflexionen und diskursanalytischer Genealogien des Religionsbegriffs die außereuropäische Religionsgeschichte als Kerngeschäft der Disziplin. Statt die Bedeutung der Religionsgeschichte für die Theoriebildung hervorzuheben, stellt der Artikel die umgekehrte Frage: Welchen Nutzen haben neuere theoretische Ansätze wie Postkolonialismus, Diskurstheorie und Religionsästhetik für die konkrete religionshistorische Arbeit? Der aus diesen Ansätzen resultierende Perspektivwechsel wird am Beispiel aztekischer Göttervorstellungen diskutiert, konkret an León-Portillas dominanter Rekonstruktion eines aztekischen philosophischen Monotheismus. (...)
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  • Davidson’s Phenomenological Argument Against the Cognitive Claims of Metaphor.Richmond Kwesi - 2021 - Axiomathes 31 (3):341-364.
    In this paper, I take a critical look at the Davidsonian argument that metaphorical sentences do not express propositions because of the phenomenological experience—seeing one thing as another thing—involved in understanding them as metaphors. According to Davidson, seeing-as is not seeing-that. This verdict is aimed at dislodging metaphor from the position of being assessed with the semantic notions of propositions, meaning, and truth. I will argue that the phenomenological or perceptual experience associated with metaphors does not determine the propositional contentfulness (...)
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  • A Multimodal View of Late Medieval Rhetoric: The Case of the White Rose of York.Marcin Kudła - 2020 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 61 (1):127-145.
    The aim of the present paper is to contribute to a better understanding of the role of heraldry, in particular of para-heraldic devices known as “badges”, in 15th-century England. The case chosen for examination is that of the white rose, one of the major badges of Edward IV. The data consists of four contemporary texts in which Edward is referred to as the “rose”, analysed against the background of the use of the white rose of York as a heraldic device. (...)
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  • Routes to embodiment.Anita Körner, Sascha Topolinski & Fritz Strack - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  • Conceptual art made simple for neuroaesthetics.Alexander Kranjec - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
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  • English Straight and Tok Pisin Stret: A Case Study from the Perspective of Cognitive Linguistics.Krzysztof Kosecki - 2020 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 61 (1):89-112.
    The framework of cognitive linguistics can be an efficient tool to represent the conceptual scope of meaning extension in reduced lexicons of pidgins and creoles. Image-schema based metaphors (Lakoff, 1993; Cienki, 1998) underlie the usage of English straight and its Tok Pisin counterpart stret, but the creole employs the concept in more contexts than English. The resultant variation in the scope of metaphor takes the form of a particular source domain being used to conceptualize more target domains than in the (...)
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  • The ethnographer as a trader.Piret Koosa & Art Leete - 2006 - Sign Systems Studies 34 (2):387-401.
    Collecting ethnographic items for the Estonian National Museum has been linked to the practice of buying objects during fieldwork. Often we can find metaphors or expressions connected with trading in the Komi fieldwork diaries. Comparing ethnographers with merchants is a stereotypical way of describing the activities of Estonian researchers in the field. If ethnographers use, in their diaries, metaphors and expressions connected to trading, it may be just a spontaneous phrasing or inter-textual play of words. Inside the community of Estonian (...)
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  • The Quaker Journey and the Framing of Corporate and Personal Belief.Douglas A. Kline - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (3):277-296.
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  • Movement Choremes: Bridging Cognitive Understanding and Formal Characterizations of Movement Patterns1.Alexander Klippel - 2011 - Topics in Cognitive Science 3 (4):722-740.
    This article discusses an approach to characterizing movement patterns (paths/trajectories) of individual agents that allows for relating aspects of cognitive conceptualization of movement patterns with formal spatial characterizations. To this end, we adopt a perspective of characterizing movement patterns on the basis of perceptual and conceptual invariants that we term movement choremes (MCs). MCs are formally grounded by behaviorally validating qualitative spatio-temporal calculi. Relating perceptual and cognitive aspects of space and formal theories of spatial information has shown promise to foster (...)
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  • Tools-?-us.Jonathan B. King - 1994 - Journal of Business Ethics 13 (4):243-257.
    Our methods of inquiry predetermine most of what we are able to know. While our modes of understanding ought to correspond to the complexities confronting us in our modern technological society, they do not. “Soft” systems methodology helps us focus on what is problematic and how it can be approached — and offers direction to exert moral control over our tools and technologies. [Powerful new technologies] pose basic threats to people and to life on Earth . . . Unless we (...)
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  • Creating common ground: A lesson from the past. [REVIEW]Jonathan King & David Acklin - 1995 - Journal of Business Ethics 14 (1):1 - 16.
    Orthodox business ethics, conventional management theory, and a great deal of higher education embody the overriding emphasis accorded to analysis by yesteryear''s science. An alternative strategy, exemplified by the war stories told by a Confederate Genral, is more consistent with late 20th century science in general and soft systems methodology in particular.The characteristic way of management that we have taught... is to take a complex system, divide it into parts, and then try to manage each part as well as possible. (...)
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  • Conceptual Metaphors for Designing Smart Environments: Device, Robot, and Friend.Jingoog Kim & Mary Lou Maher - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  • Two Theories of Home Heat Control.Willett Kempton - 1986 - Cognitive Science 10 (1):75-90.
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  • Complex Concepts.Janet Dixon Keller & F. K. Lehman - 1991 - Cognitive Science 15 (2):271-291.
    For some time cognitive anthropology, and indeed cognitive science generally, have been concerned with issues of conceptual representation. Inadequacies in classical and more recent approaches, in particular, prototype theories, have motivated a search for alternative accounts. We propose an approach to conceptual representation that requires the specification of domain theories, from which conceptual definitions are generated, and within which the relations among concepts can be formalized. We demonstrate the utility of a formal characterization of this view of domains and concepts (...)
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  • Associations Between Abstract Concepts: Investigating the Relationship Between Deictic Time and Valence.Barbara Kaup, Nina Scherer & Rolf Ulrich - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The present study examines whether deictic time and valence are mentally associated, with a link between future and positive valence and a link between past and negative valence. We employed a novel paradigm, the two-choice-sentence-completion paradigm, to address this issue. Participants were presented with an initial sentence fragment that referred to an event that was either located in time or of different valence. Participants chose between two completion phrases. When the given dimension in the initial fragment was time, the two (...)
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  • On Our Way to Europe.Eira Juntti - 1998 - European Journal of Women's Studies 5 (3-4):399-417.
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  • Interpretive social science and the "native's point of view": A closer look.Todd Jones - 1998 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 28 (1):32-68.
    In the past two decades, many anthropologists have been drawn to "interpre tive" perspectives which hold that the study of human culture would profit by using approaches developed in the humanities, rather than using approaches used in the natural sciences. The author discusses the source of the appeal of such perspectives but argues that interpretive approaches to social science tend to be fundamentally flawed, even by common everyday epistemological standards.
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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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  • “You Think That Says a Lot, but Really it Says Nothing”: An Argumentative and Linguistic Account of an Idiomatic Expression Functioning as a Presentational Device.Henrike Jansen - 2017 - Argumentation 31 (4):615-640.
    This paper discusses idiomatic expressions like ‘that says it all’, ‘that says a lot’ etc. when used in presenting an argument. These expressions are instantiations of the grammatical pattern that says Q, in which Q is an indefinite quantifying expression. By making use of the pragma-dialectical theory of argumentation and the linguistic theory of construction grammar it is argued that instantiations of that says Q expressing positive polarity can fulfil the role of an argumentation’s linking premise. Furthermore, an analysis of (...)
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  • Well‐Hidden Regularities: Abstract Uses of in and on Retain an Aspect of Their Spatial Meaning.Anja Jamrozik & Dedre Gentner - 2015 - Cognitive Science 39 (8):1881-1911.
    Prepositions name spatial relationships. But they are also used to convey abstract, non-spatial relationships —raising the question of how the abstract uses relate to the concrete spatial uses. Despite considerable success in delineating these relationships, no general account exists for the two most frequently extended prepositions: in and on. We test the proposal that what is preserved in abstract uses of these prepositions is the relative degree of control between the located object and the reference object. Across four experiments, we (...)
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  • Gödel’s metaphor.Michael R. Jackson - 1994 - Semiotica 98 (1-2):5-48.
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  • The Manipulation of Images to Handle Indeterminacy in Spatial Reasoning.Thomas R. Ioerger - 1994 - Cognitive Science 18 (4):551-593.
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  • Approximate Semantic Transference: A Computational Theory of Metaphors and Analogies.Bipin Indurkhya - 1987 - Cognitive Science 11 (4):445-480.
    In this paper we start from the assumption that in a metaphor, or an analogy, some terms belonging to one domain (source domain) are used to refer to objects other than their conventional referents belonging to a possibly different domain (target domain). We describe a formalism, which is based on the First Order Predicate Calculus, for representing the knowledge structure associated with a domain and then develop a theory of Constrained Semantic Transference [CST] which allows the terms and the structural (...)
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  • Peace and war: Public language, specialized language, and the media.Patrick Imbert - 1994 - Semiotica 99 (1-2):29-52.
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  • Minimalism in cognition and language: rich man, poor man.Patrick T. W. Hudson - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (1):22-22.
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  • Towards a Critical Re-Appraisal of Ecology Education: Scheduling an Educational Intervention to Revisit the ‘Balance of Nature’ Metaphor.Tasos Hovardas & Konstantinos Korfiatis - 2011 - Science & Education 20 (10):1039-1053.
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  • Clearing Up Obstructions: An Image Schema Approach to the Concept of ‘ Datong_’ 大通 in Chapter 6 of the _Zhuangzi.C. Lynne Hong - 2013 - Asian Philosophy 23 (3):275-290.
    In much of modern scholarship, the notion of datong 大通 in Zhuangzi’s famous zuowang 坐忘 (sitting in disregard) passage is often interpreted as either Dao or a mental/spiritual state of an ideal person, a person who has obtained Dao. In either case, however, the association between datong and such interpretation lacks detailed justification resulting from an insufficiently understood relation between datong and its immediately preceding statements. Different from the more common readings, I propose a cognitive approach based on an image (...)
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  • Book review: Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse. [REVIEW]Dali Hong - 2021 - Discourse Studies 23 (4):568-570.
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  • No perception without representation.Donald D. Hoffman - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (2):247-247.
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  • Values as constraints on affordances: Perceiving and acting properly.Bert H. Hodges & Reuben M. Baron - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (3):263–294.
    At the bottom of all human activities are “values,” the conviction that some things “ought to be” and others not. Science, however, with its immense interest in mere facts seems to lack all understanding of such‘requiredness.’… A science … which would seriously admit nothing but indifferent facts … could not fail to destroy itself.
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  • Surging ahead to a new way forward: the metaphorical foreshadowing of a policy shift.Pamela Hobbs - 2008 - Discourse and Communication 2 (1):29-56.
    The role of metaphor in political discourse has received significant attention in recent years. Expanding on the cognitive theory of metaphor developed by Lakoff and Johnson, scholars in the fields of sociolinguistics and discourse analysis have examined politicians' use of metaphorical concepts to justify policies and define events. The metaphors examined in these studies frequently have attained the status of idioms; they consequently pass unnoticed while retaining their ability to frame perspectives. However, political discourse does not limit itself to such (...)
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  • On the artificial intelligence paradox.Steffen Hölldobler - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (3):463-464.
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  • Foundations of ArtScience: Formulating the Problem.Francis Heylighen & Katarina Petrović - 2020 - Foundations of Science 26 (2):225-244.
    While art and science still functioned side-by-side during the Renaissance, their methods and perspectives diverged during the nineteenth century, creating a still enduring separation between the "two cultures". Recently, artists and scientists again collaborate more frequently, as promoted most radically by the ArtScience movement. This approach aims at a true synthesis between the intuitive, imaginative methods of art and the rational, rule-governed methods of science. To prepare the grounds for a theoretical synthesis, this paper surveys the fundamental commonalities and differences (...)
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  • Medical Metaphors Matter: Experiments Can Determine the Impact of Metaphors on Bioethical Issues.David J. Hauser & Norbert Schwarz - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (10):18-19.
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  • Yearworth v. North Bristol NHS trust: a property case of uncertain significance? [REVIEW]Shawn H. E. Harmon - 2010 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 13 (4):343-350.
    It has long been the position in law that, subject to some minor but important exceptions, property cannot be held in the human body, whether living or dead. In the recent case of Yearworth and Others v North Bristol NHS Trust, however, the Court of Appeal for England and Wales revisited the property debate and threw into doubt a number of doctrines with respect to property and the body. This brief article analyses Yearworth, (1) reviewing the facts and the Court’s (...)
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  • Two quibbles about analyticity and psychological reality.Gilbert Harman - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (1):21-22.
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  • Ipseity, alterity, and community: The tri-unity of Maya therapeutic healing.T. S. Harvey - 2006 - Zygon 41 (4):903-914.
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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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  • Transforming trash to treasure Cultural ambiguity in foetal cell research.Kristofer Hansson, Håkan Widner, Åsa Mäkitalo, Susanne Lundin & Andréa Wiszmeg - 2021 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 16 (1):1-12.
    BackgroundRich in different kind of potent cells, embryos are used in modern regenerative medicine and research. Neurobiologists today are pushing the boundaries for what can be done with embryos existing in the transitory margins of medicine. Therefore, there is a growing need to develop conceptual frameworks for interpreting the transformative cultural, biological and technical processes involving these aborted, donated and marginal embryos. This article is a contribution to this development of frameworks.MethodsThis article examines different emotional, cognitive and discursive strategies used (...)
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  • “Magic through many minor measures”: How introducing a flowline production mode in six steps enables journalist team autonomy in local news organizations.Aina Landsverk Hagen, Ingrid M. Tolstad & Arne Lindseth Bygdås - 2022 - AI and Society 37 (2):745-759.
    While facing cuts, downsizing and revenue losses, media organizations experience paradoxical demands in being organized for print or linear production with daily deadlines and simultaneously striving to be ‘digital first’ and produce and publish stories online on a continuous basis throughout the day. In this paper, we describe efforts applied when introducing the metaphor flowline in a medium-sized newspaper organization in Norway with the aim of aligning their production and publishing processes to readers’ consumption of online news. Both the production (...)
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  • Confronting Conceptual Challenges in Thermodynamics by Use of Self-Generated Analogies.Jesper Haglund & Fredrik Jeppsson - 2014 - Science & Education 23 (7):1505-1529.
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  • Symbolism and Social Phenomena: Toward the Integration of Past and Current Theoretical Approaches.Elżbieta Hałas - 2002 - European Journal of Social Theory 5 (3):351-366.
    This article takes up, but in a different key, an argument of postmodernists that the over-rationalized conception of society tends to ignore important phenomena such as those belonging to the symbolic domain. It is suggested that the emerging programme of symbolic sociology may contribute toward a new synthetic and interdisciplinary thinking in social sciences. The concept of symbolism as a social phenomenon rather than as an autonomous linguistic or semiotic system is presented; and the argument is made that if social (...)
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  • On the Bodily Basis of Human Cognition: A Philosophical Perspective on Embodiment.Amitabha Das Gupta - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15:745095.
    This paper seeks to show that human cognition cannot be characterised purely in mentalistic term. It has a bodily basis and cognition is thus the product of the interplay between mind, body, and brain. This is how the idea of embodiment and its importance is realised and gets its foothold in both philosophy and cognitive science. This brings a radical change introducing a new framework for philosophy and cognitive science. In this new change philosophy and cognitive science have a special (...)
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  • The methodological significance of scientific metaphor.Guichun Guo - 2007 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 2 (3):437-453.
    The essential significance of scientific metaphor lies in applying the general metaphorical theory to specific interpretations and elaborations of scientific theories to form a methodology of scientific explanation. It is a contextual grasp of objective reality. A given metaphorical context and its grasp of the essence of reality can only be valid when the context is continually restructured. Taking the context as a whole, the methodological characteristic of scientific metaphor lies in the unity of understanding and choice, experience and concepts, (...)
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