Existence Is A Location

conceptual-metaphor JourneysEvent Structure

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticsphilosophy

What It Brings

To exist is to be here. To not exist is to be elsewhere — or nowhere. This ontological metaphor maps the abstract concept of existence onto spatial presence, making “being” a matter of location. Things come into existence (arrive at a place), go out of existence (leave a place), and while they exist, they are here, present, somewhere. The metaphor is so basic that it is built into the verb “to be” itself, which serves double duty as both existential (“there is a problem”) and locative (“the book is on the table”).

Key structural parallels:

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss EXISTENCE IS A LOCATION as part of their treatment of ontological metaphors in Metaphors We Live By. The metaphor is connected to the broader Event Structure system, where STATES ARE LOCATIONS and CHANGES ARE MOVEMENTS. Existence is the most basic state, and the location metaphor applies to it just as it applies to emotional states, financial conditions, and social situations.

The philosophical implications are deep. Heidegger’s entire project in Being and Time can be read as an attempt to think about existence without the location metaphor — to ask what “being” means without reducing it to “being somewhere.” The English existential construction “there is” embeds the metaphor at the grammatical level, making it nearly impossible to talk about existence in English without invoking spatial presence.

References

Related Mappings