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George LakoffFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaGeorge Lakoff

Professor George Lakoff

BornMay 24, 1941(age74)Bayonne, New Jersey

ResidenceBerkeley, California,USA

NationalityUnited States

FieldsCognitive linguisticsCognitive science

InstitutionsUniversity of California, Berkeley

Alma materIndiana UniversityMIT

KnownforConceptual metaphor theoryEmbodied cognition

SpouseRobin Lakoff(divorced), Kathleen Frumkin (current spouse)

Websitegeorgelakoff.com

George P. Lakoff(/lekf/, born May 24, 1941) is an Americancognitive linguist, best known for his thesis that lives of individuals are significantly influenced by the centralmetaphorsthey use to explain complex phenomena.The metaphor thesis, introduced in his 1980 bookMetaphors We Live Byhas found applications in a number of academic disciplines and its application to politics, literature, philosophy and mathematics has led him into territory normally considered basic topolitical science. In the 1996 bookMoral Politics, Lakoff describedconservativevoters as being influenced by the "strict father model" as a central metaphor for such a complex phenomenon as thestateandliberal/progressivevoters as being influenced by the "nurturant parent model" as thefolk psychologicalmetaphor for this complex phenomenon. According to him, an individual's experience and attitude towards sociopolitical issues is influenced by beingframedinlinguistic constructions. InMetaphor and War: The Metaphor System Used to Justify War in the Gulf, he argues that the American involvement in theGulf warwas either obscured or was put a spin on, by the metaphors which were used by the firstBushadministration to justify it. Between 2003 and 2008, Lakoff was involved with aprogressivethink tank, the now defunctRockridge Institute.[1][2]He is a member of the scientific committee of theFundacin IDEAS(IDEAS Foundation), Spain'sSocialist Party's think tank.The more general theory that elaborated his thesis is known asembodied mind. He is a professor of linguistics at theUniversity of California, Berkeley, where he has taught since 1972.Contents[hide] 1Work 1.1Reappraisal of metaphor 1.2Linguistics wars 1.3Embodied mind 1.4Mathematics 2Political significance and involvement 3Disagreement with Steven Pinker 4Works 4.1Writings 4.2Videos 5See also 6References 7Further reading 8External linksWork[edit]Reappraisal of metaphor[edit]Although some of Lakoff's research involves questions traditionally pursued by linguists, such as the conditions under which a certain linguistic construction is grammatically viable, he is most famous for his reappraisal of the role that metaphors play in socio-political lives of humans.Metaphor has been seen within the Western scientific tradition as purely a linguistic construction. The essential thrust of Lakoff's work has been the argument that metaphors are primarily a conceptual construction, and indeed are central to the development of thought.He suggested that:"Our ordinary conceptual system, in terms of which we both think and act, is fundamentally metaphorical in nature."Non-metaphorical thought is for Lakoff only possible when we talk about purely physical reality. For Lakoff the greater the level of abstraction the more layers of metaphor are required to express it. People do not notice these metaphors for various reasons. One reason is that some metaphors become 'dead' and we no longer recognize their origin. Another reason is that we just don't "see" what is "going on".For instance, in intellectual debate the underlying metaphor is usually that argument is war (later revised as "argument is struggle"): Hewonthe argument. Your claims areindefensible. Heshot downall my arguments. His criticisms wereright on target. If you use thatstrategy, he'llwipe you out.For Lakoff, the development of thought has been the process of developing better metaphors. The application of one domain of knowledge to another domain of knowledge offers new perceptions and understandings.Linguistics wars[edit]Lakoff began his career as a student and later a teacher of the theory oftransformational grammardeveloped byMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyprofessorNoam Chomsky. In the late 1960s, however, he joined with others to promotegenerative semantics[3]as an alternative to Chomsky'sgenerative syntax. In an interview he stated:During that period, I was attempting to unify Chomsky's transformational grammar with formallogic. I had helped work out a lot of the early details of Chomsky's theory of grammar. Noam claimed then and still does, so far as I can tell thatsyntaxis independent of meaning, context, background knowledge, memory, cognitive processing, communicative intent, and every aspect of the body...In working through the details of his early theory, I found quite a few cases wheresemantics, context, and other such factors entered into rules governing the syntactic occurrences of phrases andmorphemes. I came up with the beginnings of an alternative theory in 1963 and, along with wonderful collaborators like"Haj" RossandJim McCawley, developed it through the sixties.[4]Lakoff's claim that Chomsky asserts independence between syntax and semantics has been rejected by Chomsky, who has given examples from within his work where he talks about the relationship between his semantics and syntax. Chomsky goes further and claims that Lakoff has "virtually no comprehension of the work he is discussing" (the work in question being Chomsky's).[5]His differences with Chomsky contributed to fierce, acrimonious debates among linguists that have come to be known as the "linguistics wars".Embodied mind[edit]Further information:Embodied philosophyWhen Lakoff claims the mind is "embodied", he is arguing that almost all of human cognition, up through the most abstract reasoning, depends on and makes use of such concrete and "low-level" facilities as the sensorimotor system and the emotions. Therefore embodiment is a rejection not only of dualism vis-a-vis mind and matter, but also of claims that human reason can be basically understood without reference to the underlying "implementation details".Lakoff offers three complementary but distinct sorts of arguments in favor of embodiment. First, using evidence[which?]fromneuroscienceandneural networksimulations, he argues that certain concepts, such as color andspatial relationconcepts (e.g. "red" or "over"; see alsoqualia), can be almost entirely understood through the examination of how processes of perception or motor control work.Second, based oncognitive linguistics' analysis of figurative language, he argues that the reasoning we use for such abstract topics as warfare, economics, or morality is somehow rooted in the reasoning we use for such mundane topics as spatial relationships. (Seeconceptual metaphor.)Finally, based on research incognitive psychologyand some investigations in thephilosophy of language, he argues that very few of the categories used by humans are actually of the black-and-white type amenable to analysis in terms of necessary and sufficient conditions. On the contrary, most categories are supposed to be much more complicated and messy, just like our bodies."We are neural beings," Lakoff states, "Our brains take their input from the rest of our bodies. What our bodies are like and how they function in the world thus structures the very concepts we can use to think. We cannot think just anything only what our embodied brains permit."[6]Lakoff believes consciousness to be neurally embodied, however he explicitly states that the mechanism is not just neural computation alone. Using the concept of disembodiment, Lakoff supports the physicalist approach to the afterlife. If the soul can not have any of the properties of the body, then Lakoff claims it can not feel, perceive, think, be conscious, or have a personality. If this is true, then Lakoff asks what would be the point of the afterlife?[citation needed]Many scientists share the belief that there are problems withfalsifiabilityandfoundation ontologiespurporting to describe "what exists", to a sufficient degree of rigor to establish a reasonable method ofempirical validation. But Lakoff takes this further to explain why hypotheses built with complex metaphors cannot be directly falsified. Instead, they can only be rejected based on interpretations of empirical observations guided by other complex metaphors. This is what he means when he says[7]that falsifiability itself can never be established by any reasonable method that would not rely ultimately on a shared human bias. The bias he's referring to is the set of conceptual metaphors governing how people interpret observations.Lakoff is, with coauthorsMark JohnsonandRafael E. Nez, one of the primary proponents of the embodied mind thesis. Lakoff discussed these themes in his 2001Gifford Lecturesat theUniversity of Glasgow, published asThe Nature and Limits of Human Understanding.[8]Others who have written about the embodied mind include philosopherAndy Clark(See his Being There), philosopher and neurobiologistsHumberto MaturanaandFrancisco Varelaand his studentEvan Thompson(See Varela, Thompson & Rosch's "The Embodied Mind"), roboticists such asRodney Brooks,Rolf PfeiferandTom Ziemke, the physicistDavid Bohm(see hisThought As A System),Ray Gibbs(see his "Embodiment and Cognitive Science"),John GrinderandRichard Bandlerin theirneuro-linguistic programming, andJulian Jaynes. All of these writers can be traced back to earlier philosophical writings, most notably in thephenomenologicaltradition, such asMaurice Merleau-PontyandHeidegger. The basic thesis of "embodied mind" is also traceable to the American contextualist or pragmatist tradition, notablyJohn Deweyin such works as Art As Experience.Mathematics[edit]According to Lakoff, even mathematics is subjective to the human species and its cultures: thus "any question of math's being inherent in physical reality is moot, since there is no way to know whether or not it is." By this, he is saying that there is nothing outside of the thought structures we derive from our embodied minds that we can use to "prove" that mathematics is somehow beyond biology. Lakoff andRafael E. Nez(2000) argue at length thatmathematicalandphilosophicalideas are best understood in light of the embodied mind. Thephilosophy of mathematicsought therefore to look to the current scientific understanding of the human body as afoundation ontology, and abandon self-referential attempts to ground the operational components of mathematics in anything other than "meat".Mathematical reviewers have generally been critical of Lakoff and Nez, pointing to mathematical errors[citation needed]. Lakoff claims that these errors have been corrected in subsequent printings[citation needed]. Although their book attempts a refutation of some of the most widely accepted viewpoints in philosophy of mathematics and advice for how the field might proceed going forward, they have yet to elicit much of a reaction from philosophers of mathematics themselves.[citation needed]The small community specializing in the psychology of mathematical learning, to which Nez belongs, is paying attention.[9]Lakoff has also claimed that we should remain agnostic about whether math is somehow wrapped up with the very nature of the universe. Early in 2001 Lakoff told the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): "Mathematics may or may not be out there in the world, but there's no way that we scientifically could possibly tell." This is because the structures of scientific knowledge are not "out there" but rather in our brains, based on the details of our anatomy. Therefore, we cannot "tell" that mathematics is "out there" without relying on conceptual metaphors rooted in our biology. This claim bothers those who believe that there really is a way we could "tell". The falsifiability of this claim is perhaps the central problem in thecognitive science of mathematics, a field that attempts to establish afoundation ontologybased on the human cognitive and scientific process.[10]Political significance and involvement[edit]Lakoff has publicly expressed both ideas about the conceptual structures that he views as central to understanding the political process, and some of his particular political views. He almost always discusses the latter in terms of the former.Moral Politics(1996, revisited in 2002) gives book-length consideration to the conceptual metaphors that Lakoff sees as present in the minds of American "liberals" and "conservatives". The book is a blend of cognitive science and political analysis. Lakoff makes an attempt to keep his personal views confined to the last third of the book, where he explicitly argues for the superiority of the liberal vision.[2]Lakoff argues that the differences in opinions between liberals and conservatives follow from the fact that they subscribe with different strength to two different central metaphors about the relationship of the state to its citizens. Both, he claims, see governance through metaphors of thefamily. Conservatives would subscribe more strongly and more often to a model that he calls the "strict father model" and has a family structured around a strong, dominant "father" (government), and assumes that the "children" (citizens) need to be disciplined to be made into responsible "adults" (morality, self-financing). Once the "children" are "adults", though, the "father" should not interfere with their lives: the government should stay out of the business of those in society who have proved their responsibility. In contrast, Lakoff argues that liberals place more support in a model of the family, which he calls the "nurturant parent model", based on "nurturant values", where both "mothers" and "fathers" work to keep the essentially good "children" away from "corrupting influences" (pollution, social injustice, poverty, etc.). Lakoff says that most people have a blend of both metaphors applied at different times, and that political speech works primarily by invoking these metaphors and urging the subscription of one over the other.[11]Lakoff further argues that one of the reasons liberals have had difficulty since the 1980s is that they have not been as aware of their own guiding metaphors, and have too often accepted conservative terminology framed in a way to promote the strict father metaphor. Lakoff insists that liberals must cease using terms likepartial birth abortionandtax reliefbecause they are manufactured specifically to allow the possibilities of only certain types of opinions.Tax relieffor example, implies explicitly thattaxesare an affliction, something someone would want "relief" from. To use the terms of another metaphoric worldview, Lakoff insists, is to unconsciously support it. Liberals must support linguisticthink tanksin the same way that conservatives do if they are going to succeed in appealing to those in the country who share their metaphors.[12]Between 2003 and 2008, Lakoff was involved with aprogressivethink tank, theRockridge Institute, an involvement that follows in part from his recommendations inMoral Politics. Among his activities with the Institute, which concentrates in part on helping liberal candidates and politicians with re-framing political metaphors, Lakoff has given numerous public lectures and written accounts of his message fromMoral Politics.In 2008, Lakoff joinedFenton Communications, the nation's largestpublic interestcommunications firm, as a Senior Consultant.One of his political works,Don't Think of an Elephant! Know Your Values and Frame the Debate, self-labeled as "the Essential Guide for Progressives", was published in September 2004 and features a foreword by formerDemocraticpresidential candidateHoward Dean.Disagreement with Steven Pinker[edit]In 2006Steven Pinkerwrote an unfavorable review[13]of Lakoff's bookWhose Freedom? The Battle over America's Most Important Idea. Pinker's review was published inThe New Republic. Pinker argued that Lakoff's propositions are unsupported and his prescriptions are a recipe for electoral failure. He wrote that Lakoff was condescending and deplored Lakoff's "shameless caricaturing of beliefs" and his "faith in the power of euphemism". Pinker portrayed Lakoff's arguments as "cognitive relativism, in which mathematics, science, and philosophy are beauty contests between rival frames rather than attempts to characterize the nature of reality". Lakoff wrote a rebuttal to the review[14]stating that his position on many matters is the exact reverse of what Pinker attributes to him. Lakoff explicitly rejected, for example, the cognitive relativism and faith in euphemism described above, arguing in favor of a deeper understanding of rationality that discards themodal logicconceptualization of rationality in favor of the better supportedframingconceptualization.[14]Works[edit]Writings[edit] 2012 with Elisabeth Wehling.The Little Blue Book: The Essential Guide to Thinking and Talking Democratic.Free Press.ISBN 978-1-476-70001-4. 2008.The Political Mind: Why You Can't Understand 21st-Century American Politics with an 18th-Century Brain.Viking Adult.ISBN 978-0-670-01927-4. 2006.Whose Freedom?: The Battle over America's Most Important Idea.Farrar, Straus and Giroux.ISBN 978-0-374-15828-6. 2005."A Cognitive Scientist Looks at Daubert",American Journal of Public Health. 95, no. 1: S114. 2005. The Brains Concept: The Role of the Sensory-Motor System in Conceptual Knowledge-Vittorio Gallese, Universit di Parma and George Lakoff University of California, Berkeley, USA[15] 2004.Don't Think of an Elephant: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate.Chelsea Green Publishing.ISBN 978-1-931498-71-5. 2003 (1980) withMark Johnson.Metaphors We Live By.University of Chicago Press. 2003 edition contains an 'Afterword'.ISBN 978-0-226-46800-6. 2001 Edition.Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think. University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-46771-9. 2000 withRafael Nez.Where Mathematics Comes From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being. Basic Books.ISBN 0-465-03771-2. 1999 withMark Johnson).Philosophy In The Flesh: the Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. Basic Books. 1996.Moral politics : What Conservatives Know that Liberals Don't. University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-46805-1. 1989 withMark Turner.More Than Cool Reason: A Field Guide to Poetic Metaphor.University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-46812-9. 1987.Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal About the Mind.University of Chicago Press.ISBN 0-226-46804-6. 1980 with Mark Johnson.Metaphors We Live By. University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-46801-3. 1968.Adverbs and the Concept of Deep Structure. Foundations of Language. Vol. 4, No. 1 (Feb., 1968), pp.429.Videos[edit] How Democrats and Progressives Can Win: Solutions from George LakoffDVD format.OCLC315514475See also[edit] Code word (figure of speech) Cognitive linguistics Cognitive science of mathematics Conceptual metaphor Embodied philosophy Framing (social sciences) Invariance principle Language and thought Metaphor Metonymy Nature Of IrregularitiesReferences[edit]1. Jump up^"George Lakoff". Rockridge Institute. Retrieved2007-06-13.2. ^Jump up to:abLakoff, George (2002).Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.ISBN0-226-46771-6.3. Jump up^http://www.db-thueringen.de/servlets/DerivateServlet/Derivate-4550/Government_and_Binding.pdf4. Jump up^John Brockman (03/09/99), Edge.org, "Philosophy In The Flesh" A Talk With George Lakoff[1]5. Jump up^The New York Review of Books, Chomsky Replies, 1973 20;126. Jump up^"EDGE 3rd Culture: A TALK WITH GEORGE LAKOFF". Edge.org. Retrieved2013-09-29.7. Jump up^Lakoff, G., and M. Johnson, 1999, Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought, New York: Basic Books8. Jump up^ed. Anthony Sanford, T & T Clark, 2003.Summary at giffordlectures.orgby Brannon Hancock.9. Jump up^G. Lakoff & R. Nez. (2000). Where Mathematics Comes From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being. New York: Basic Books.10. Jump up^Dehaene, S. (1997) The number sense: How the mind creates mathematics. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN = 0-19-513240-811. Jump up^Lakoff, George (2002).Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp.143176.ISBN0-226-46771-6.12. Jump up^Lakoff, George (2002).Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp.415418.ISBN0-226-46771-6.13. Jump up^"Block that Metaphor!",New Republic.14. ^Jump up to:ab"When cognitive science enters politics"at theWayback Machine(archived May 17, 2008), rockridgeinstitute.org, 12 October 2006.15. Jump up^http://www.ppls.ed.ac.uk/ppig/documents/brainconcepts_000.pdfFurther reading[edit] Dean, John W. (2006),Conservatives without Conscience, Viking PenguinISBN 0-670-03774-5. Harris, Randy Allen (1995).The Linguistics Wars. Oxford University Press.ISBN 0-19-509834-X. (Focuses on the disputes Lakoff and others have had with Chomsky.) Haser, Verena (2005).Metaphor, Metonymy, and Experientialist Philosophy: Challenging Cognitive Semantics (Topics in English Linguistics),Mouton de Gruyter.ISBN 978-3-11-018283-5(A critical look at the ideas behind embodiment and conceptual metaphor.) Kelleher, William J.(2005).Progressive Logic: Framing A Unified Field Theory of Values For Progressives. La CaCaada Flintridge, CA: The Empathic Science Institute.ISBN 0-9773717-1-9. McGlone, M. S. (2001). "Concepts as Metaphors" in Sam Glucksberg,Understanding Figurative Language: From Metaphors to Idioms. Oxford Psychology Series 36.Oxford University Press, 90107.ISBN 0-19-511109-5. O'Reilly, Bill(2006).Culture Warrior. New York: Broadway Books.ISBN 0-7679-2092-9. (Calls Lakoff the guiding philosopher behind the "secular progressive movement".) Renkema, Jan (2004).Introduction to Discourse Studies. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.ISBN 1-58811-529-1. Rettig, Hillary (2006).The Lifelong Activist: How to Change the World Without Losing Your Way. New York: Lantern Books.ISBN 1-59056-090-6. (Documents strong parallels between Lakoff's nurturant parent model of progressive thought and psychologist Abraham Maslow's model of the self-actualized individual. Also discusses framing in the context of marketing and sales with the aim of bolstering progressive activists' persuasive skills.) Richardt, Susanne (2005).Metaphor in Languages for Special Purposes: The Function of Conceptual Metaphor in Written Expert Language and Expert-Lay Communication in the Domains of Economics, Medicine and Computing. European University Studies: Series XIV, Anglo-Saxon Language and Literature, 413. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang.ISBN 0-8204-7381-2. Soros, George(2006).The Age of Fallibility: Consequences of the War on Terror.ISBN 1-58648-359-5. (discusses Lakoff in regard to the application of his theories on the work ofFrank Luntzand with respect to his own theory about perception and reality) Winter, Steven L. (2003).A Clearing in the Forest. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 0-226-90222-6. (Applies Lakoff's work in cognitive science and metaphor to the field of law and legal reasoning.) http://www.ppls.ed.ac.uk/ppig/documents/brainconcepts_000.pdfExternal links[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related toGeorge Lakoff.

georgelakoff.com University of California, Berkeley department of Linguistics page on George Lakoff AppearancesonC-SPAN Edge bio of Lakoff "Metaphor and War" (1991) "Metaphor and War, Again" (2003) "Thinking of Jackasses: the grand delusions of the Democratic Party", a critical review by Marc Cooper in Atlantic Monthly "Empathy is the New Black"Radio interview with Dr. George Lakoff onLiberadio(!) with Mary Mancini an Freddie O'Connell "The Political Mind" a talk by George Lakoffrecorded June 28, 2008 in Sacramento, CA George Lakoff Proposes Ballot Measure to End 2/3 Rule in State Legislature- video report byDemocracy Now! Biography and summary of Gifford Lectures(University of Glasgow, 2001) by Brannon Hancock George Lakoff WikiAuthority control WorldCat VIAF:17225145 LCCN:n80013013 ISNI:0000 0001 2122 2102 GND:107951169 SUDOC:026961504 BNF:cb11910738p(data) MusicBrainz:184269d9-2a44-4d42-81fb-78f410fd38ae NDL:00446681

Categories: 1941 births Living people American academics American Jews American linguists American political writers Cognitive scientists Enactive cognition Mathematical cognition researchers Psycholinguists Philosophers of mathematics University of California, Berkeley faculty Consciousness researchers and theorists Metaphor theorists Framing theorists Jewish American scientists Jewish philosophers American progressives 20th-century American writers 21st-century American writers