An Instrument Is a Companion

conceptual-metaphor Social RolesTool Use

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics

What It Brings

A specific form of personification: we treat the tools we depend on as beings with needs, moods, and personalities. This is not generic animism. The metaphor specifically maps the companion role — an entity that accompanies you, cooperates with you, and whose welfare you attend to — onto instruments, machines, and vehicles.

Key structural parallels:

The metaphor is strongest with instruments that require skill to operate — musical instruments, vehicles, craft tools — where the human-tool relationship genuinely involves reciprocal adaptation.

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson identify this as one of their personification metaphors in Metaphors We Live By — a mapping where the source domain is human social relations and the target is a non-human entity. The companion variant is distinctive because it implies ongoing relationship rather than one-off attribution. You don’t just personify the tool in a single utterance; you sustain a narrative of companionship across time.

The mapping has deep roots in craft culture, where artisans named their tools and treated them as partners in skilled work. It persists in developer culture (“my machine,” spoken with either affection or exasperation) and in music (“she’s got a beautiful voice,” said of a cello).

References

Related Mappings