Your (3) targets my initial trigger and why I mentioned postmodernism, sophistry, and included these 3 links: Debunking the Fake Historian Taking Over the Internet: Professor Jiang's Predictive History https://youtu.be/tSiS-8Msn1I?si=lBOXHmIFfHtppwac The Age of Hyperreal Fascism https://youtu.be/R9fpm-lorIU?si=eLizlyzgsAq624AR Bret Weinstein | Game Theory https://youtu.be/5NAQMoRzuxk?si=6zcftBKUvmdwJ9p2
When someone attempts to communicate with you, you have the *option* of either 1. meta-splaining or 2. looking _through_ the content, rather than looking _at_ the content. As with your analogy to can openers, I had the option of being a smartass and pointing out the inadequacy of the term "can opener" (1) or engaging with my best guess at what you actually meant. I kindasorta chose to do both in order to get at the point. People who yap constantly about how this or that word or concept is a metaphor (or any number of other peeves like split infinitives, vocal fry, ending a sentence with a preposition, conflating envy with jealousy, etc.) are *choosing* to engage in (1) to the preemptive exclusion of (2). If we go back to the original context of ultracrepidarianism and the usefulness of the naked emperor story, we don't *need* to use the word (or concept) of metaphor to get to the point. And we don't need the allegory/fable at all. Fresh eyes can help a group see things in fresh ways. Like ... duh. Obviously. Even referring to the naked emperor story seems more like a literary "flex" than a competent contribution. More deeply, Nick need not use the word/concept of metaphor in his criticism of the definedness of "atmospheric press". I often get the feeling I'm trapped on the couch with Beavis and Butthead. But instead of "Huh-huh-huh-huh. He said 'anus'", we get "Huh-huh-huh-huh. That's a metaphor." Or maybe it reminds me of working in Silly Valley, where all the tech bros talked about quantumquantumquantum in some bizarre attempt to look smart. IDK. Sometimes ... *most* times a cigar is just a cigar. How irritating is it when your hipster friend overuses "phallic"? Or winks at you whenever a woman uses the word "taco"? OMG, give it a rest. On 3/18/26 6:37 AM, Prof David West wrote:
1 - I plead guilty to misusing "metaphor." Only, however, to the extent that I conflate multiple similar terms, e.g., simile and analogy, under a single umbrella, "metaphor." Also, because, even when used precisely, a metaphor can be different 'things' at different times—i.e., it has a lifecycle—including epiphor, diaphor, failed metaphor, lexical term, and my own neologism, "paraphor." 2 - Metaphor is, and should be used as such, just as precise a term as any other word; including the ones you listed and catachresis. There is a thread within linguistics study dedicated to metaphor. 3 - As for, 'everything a metaphor'. Every noun (likely any word) in a language might be construed as metaphor, e.g., "dog" */_is_/* "this complex, amalgamated, integrated, bundle of sensor (e.g., nerve ending) blips." 4 - with regards responsibility: the damage done by unrecognized, unacknowledged metaphors like, "brain is computer," and, "executing software is cognition," are extraordinarily harmful but no one is held to account for asserting them. davew On Tue, Mar 17, 2026, at 6:17 PM, glen wrote: > Were you to write something like: "... scientists, when they use such > rich catachreses as 'entanglement', fail to take responsibility for > consequences of such use", I would not object. That word, unlike > metaphor, has a fairly concrete meaning, something like "fills lexical > gaps in scientific terminology, providing names and concepts where none > previously existed". > > Or, were you to write something like: "... scientists, when they use > such rich didactic metaphors as 'entanglement', fail to take > responsibility for consequences of such use", that would be OK too. The > 'didactic' qualifier helps the reader *understand* whatever the hell > you might mean. > > I don't actually care that much what the first person who used a word > meant by that word. Etymology and usage history are interesting and can > sometimes hint at the word's normative meaning. But what matters much > much more is what the current author(s) mean when they use the word. > > And, again, if everything's a metaphor, then the word 'metaphor' is > useless... like saying everything is a thing. It feels like the Bad > kind of "sophistry" to use a phrase like "the metaphor (metaphor)". It > not only wastes everyone's time; it also gives me The Ick: > https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=the%20ick <https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=the%20ick> It's > difficult to steel man something when that thing grosses you out. > > > On 3/17/26 12:31 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote: >> Cmon, Glen, where is the Steelman of Yore? >> >> To apply the metaphor (metaphor) to every utterance is no more "corrupt" than to mathematize every proposition. It becomes corrupt only when it is not pursued honesty. "Entanglement" is a metaphor. It directs the mind. "Natural selection" is a metaphor. It also directs the mind. >> >> My worry is that scientists, when they use such rich metaphors as entanglement fail to take responsibility for the consequences of such use. Let's assume that the person who first used the metaphor, entanglement, meant something by it. We can formalize the analysis of metaphors just as we can mathematicize any proposition. And in that formalization, we can sort out the direction, and misdirection in the metaphor. What did they intend when they used the metaphor entanglement? What did they NOT intend? And when the disclaimers have been completed, is there anything left of the metaphor. If not, then, perhaps,*/scientists should stop using the metaphor/*. In the same way that we have stopped calling porpoises "fish". >> >> I don't know enough to even speculate what role "entanglement" as a metaphor has played in the development of quantum physics. But I claim to know enough about human behavior to assert that it has played some role, and that physicists run some risks if they altogether disclaim it. >> >> What might we gain, SteelMan, from exploring human thought as movement from metaphor to metaphor, each new experience being understood as a version of some previous one? My love is like a red,red rose, delicate, delighting, fragrant. But OH! the thorns. Did I mean the thorns. Was there ever a rose that did not have thorns? Metaphors are like that. >> >> When you say that we metaphorists are liars, what are the experiences of being lied to that you bring to bear. When we analyze metaphors (I assert), it's always best to be as particular as possible. Describe to me a particular jarring instance of being lied to. Now project that experience onto the experience of being metaphored to. What are the surplus meanings of applying the metaphor; which of those surplus meanings are disclaimed; once these disclaimers have been noted, does the metaphor retain any heuristic value. >> >> I have to say, I don't like being called a liar. But -- as the saying goes -- "if the foo shits", I guess I have to wear it. So, what experience do you imagine when you imagine being lied to? What aspects of that experience do you intend when you call metaphorists liars? What aspect do you disclaim? What is the heuristic value of the metaphor, once the disclaimers have been made. >> >> By the way, just as an interpersonal matter, if you call me a sinner, it doesn't help that you immediately call yourself a sinner. Any contempt you feel for yourself, does nothing to salve the contempt you feel for me. In fact it makes it worse. I have to bear the contempt of an admitted /sinner!/ >> >> But I love you anyway. I wouldn't engage you if I didnt. >> >> Nick
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