Love Is a Physical Force
conceptual-metaphor Embodied Experience → Love 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:
- Gravitational attraction — lovers are drawn to each other by a force proportional to their proximity and intensity. “I’m drawn to her” maps physical attraction (the physics kind) onto romantic attraction. The force operates at a distance; you feel the pull before you understand it.
- Magnetism — certain people are magnetic. “There’s a real magnetism between them” treats compatibility as a physical property of the people involved, not a choice or a construction. Magnetic attraction is binary — you are either attracted or you are not. The metaphor makes love feel like a fact about the world rather than a decision.
- Electricity — “There was a spark between them.” “The chemistry is electric.” Love as electrical discharge maps the sudden, involuntary character of attraction. Sparks are instantaneous, uncontrollable, and potentially dangerous. The metaphor captures love at first sight better than any other frame.
- Falling — “I fell for her.” “Falling in love” is a gravitational event. The lover does not walk, climb, or leap into love — they fall, which implies loss of footing, loss of control, and a downward trajectory. The most common expression of romantic love in English is a metaphor of gravitational failure.
- Fields and forces — love radiates. “She’s radiant.” “He has a powerful presence.” The beloved generates a field that affects everyone in range. Charisma is treated as a physical emanation, not a social construction.
Where It Breaks
- Physical forces are symmetric; love often is not — gravity pulls equally on both objects. Magnetic poles attract equally. But unrequited love is one of the most common human experiences. The force metaphor has no natural way to represent one-directional attraction. When the metaphor says “I’m drawn to her,” it implies she is also drawn to you — which may be false.
- The metaphor eliminates choice — forces act on objects; objects don’t consent. “I couldn’t help falling in love” treats the lover as a passive body acted upon by physics. This is seductive but dangerous: it removes agency from romantic decisions, making it harder to hold people accountable for pursuing relationships that are harmful, inappropriate, or unwanted.
- Forces are impersonal; love is not — gravity doesn’t care who you are. Treating love as a force strips it of the particular: why this person, why now, why in this way. The metaphor makes love feel universal and mechanical when it is actually specific and contextual.
- Falling implies hitting the ground — the gravitational metaphor has an endpoint that is never discussed. If you fall in love, where do you land? The metaphor borrows the exhilaration of free fall but not the impact. It makes the beginning of love vivid and the middle of love invisible.
- The metaphor conflates attraction with love — physical forces describe the initial pull beautifully but have nothing to say about commitment, maintenance, or the daily work of partnership. The spark metaphor is powerful for beginnings and silent about everything that follows.
Expressions
- “I’m drawn to her” — romantic interest as gravitational pull
- “Falling in love” — the onset of love as gravitational descent, loss of footing
- “There was a spark between them” — initial attraction as electrical discharge
- “The chemistry is electric” — compatibility as electrochemical reaction
- “She’s magnetic” — the beloved as a source of physical attraction field
- “I couldn’t help myself” — the lover as an object acted upon by force, agency removed
- “They were pulled apart” — separation as the overcoming of an attractive force
- “There’s a real gravitational pull” — intense attraction as measurable physical force
- “She radiates warmth” — the beloved as a source of energy emission
- “I was struck by her beauty” — attraction as physical impact, the beloved as projectile
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
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Metaphors We Live By (1980), Chapter 10
- Kovecses, Z. Metaphor and Emotion (2000) — systematic analysis of force metaphors within the love metaphor cluster
- Lakoff, G., Espenson, J. & Schwartz, A. Master Metaphor List (1991), “Love Is A Physical Force”
- Fisher, H. Why We Love: The Nature and Chemistry of Romantic Love (2004) — neurochemistry of attraction as literal force-like mechanism