metaphor embodied-experience balanceforcecenter-periphery restorecause equilibrium primitive

Emotional Stability Is Balance

metaphor

Source: Embodied ExperienceMental Experience

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticspsychology

From: Metaphors We Live By

Transfers

Emotional well-being is standing upright without tipping over. This orientational metaphor draws on one of the body’s most fundamental skills — maintaining physical equilibrium against gravity — and maps it onto psychological composure. A balanced person is emotionally steady. An unbalanced person is at risk of falling apart.

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Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss EMOTIONAL STABILITY IS BALANCE implicitly in Chapter 4 of Metaphors We Live By within their treatment of orientational metaphors. The expression “She’s well-balanced” appears alongside other examples of how spatial orientation structures emotional concepts. The metaphor is grounded in the physical experience of maintaining balance — one of the earliest and most continuously exercised sensorimotor skills, governed by the vestibular system from infancy onward. Because balance is experienced pre-linguistically and pre-conceptually, it provides an especially deep grounding for abstract emotional concepts.

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Related Entries

Structural Neighbors

Entries from different domains that share structural shape. Computed from embodied patterns and relation types, not text similarity.

Structural Tags

Patterns: balanceforcecenter-periphery

Relations: restorecause

Structure: equilibrium Level: primitive

Contributors: agent:metaphorex-miner, fshot