Love Is a Physical Force

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceLove and Relationships

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticspsychology

What It Brings

Love as gravity, magnetism, electricity — an invisible force that acts on bodies without their consent. The metaphor maps the physics of attraction and repulsion onto the experience of romantic desire. Where LOVE IS A JOURNEY gives love narrative structure and LOVE IS MADNESS gives it phenomenological texture, LOVE IS A PHYSICAL FORCE gives it causal mechanism. You don’t choose to fall in love any more than an iron filing chooses to move toward a magnet.

Key structural parallels:

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson include LOVE IS A PHYSICAL FORCE in the cluster of love metaphors discussed in Metaphors We Live By (Chapter 10). It belongs to their broader category of ontological metaphors — abstractions structured in terms of physical objects and forces. The force metaphor for love is particularly interesting because it connects to the EVENT STRUCTURE metaphor system: if causes are forces (see causes-are-forces), then the cause of love is a force acting on the lover. “I fell for her” is not just a love metaphor; it is a causation metaphor applied to love.

The metaphor has ancient roots. The Greek concept of eros as a force or power that seizes the lover appears in Sappho, Plato, and the tragic poets. Cupid’s arrow is a force metaphor made literal — an external projectile that causes love by striking the victim. The Enlightenment added gravitational and magnetic variants as Newtonian physics gave the culture new source domains. Contemporary usage favors “chemistry” and “electricity” — the current era’s preferred physics.

References

Related Mappings