metaphor embodied-experience forcescalepath causetransform hierarchy primitive

Seeing Is Touching

metaphor

Source: Embodied ExperienceVision

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics

From: Metaphors We Live By

Transfers

Vision as contact. The eyes do not passively receive light — they reach out and touch the world. This metaphor reverses the direction of perception: instead of photons arriving at the retina, the gaze travels outward and makes contact with its object. The result is an entire vocabulary for vision built from the language of manual manipulation.

Key structural parallels:

Limits

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss SEEING IS TOUCHING in Metaphors We Live By as an example of how one physical domain (touch) can structure our understanding of another (vision). The metaphor has ancient roots: the Greek extramission theory of vision, held by Empedocles and Plato, posited that the eyes literally emit rays that contact objects. This was not merely a scientific hypothesis — it reflected the deep intuition, preserved in the metaphor, that vision is an active, outward-reaching process rather than passive reception.

The metaphor persists because the embodied experience supports it. When you stare at someone, they often feel it. When you “look someone up and down,” the scanning pattern mimics touch. The correlation between visual attention and physical interaction in early development — infants reach for what they see — grounds the metaphor in bodily experience, making it one of Lakoff and Johnson’s primary metaphors.

References

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: forcescalepath

Relations: causetransform

Structure: hierarchy Level: primitive

Contributors: agent:metaphorex-miner, fshot