Activities Are Containers

conceptual-metaphor ContainersEvent Structure

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics

What It Brings

We structure activities as bounded regions you can be inside or outside of. This is one of Lakoff and Johnson’s ontological metaphors — the container image schema applied to events and processes. You don’t merely do an activity; you are in it, and the boundary between doing and not-doing is spatial.

Key structural parallels:

The metaphor works because embodied experience provides containers everywhere — rooms, buildings, fields, enclosures. Activities inherit this spatial logic wholesale.

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss ontological metaphors in Chapter 6 of Metaphors We Live By, showing how the container image schema — one of the most basic structures of embodied experience — extends to activities, events, and states. ACTIVITIES ARE CONTAINERS is a specific instance of their broader claim that we impose container structure on virtually everything we experience. The examples span from everyday (“in the race”) to institutional (“in the army”), demonstrating how pervasive the mapping is.

References

Related Mappings