Love Is Madness

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceLove and Relationships

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticspsychology

What It Brings

Love as the loss of reason. The metaphor maps the phenomenology of insanity onto the experience of intense romantic attraction: impaired judgment, obsessive fixation, behavior that defies the lover’s own interests and self-understanding. To be in love is to be out of your mind.

Key structural parallels:

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson list LOVE IS MADNESS among the cluster of conceptual metaphors for love in Metaphors We Live By, alongside LOVE IS A JOURNEY, LOVE IS A PHYSICAL FORCE, and LOVE IS WAR. The madness metaphor is notable for how ancient and cross-cultural it is. Plato’s Phaedrus describes erotic love as a form of divine madness (theia mania). The medieval tradition of love-sickness treated infatuation as a medical condition with physical symptoms. Shakespeare’s lovers are routinely described as mad.

The metaphor endures because the phenomenology of early-stage romantic love genuinely resembles obsessive-compulsive patterns. Neurochemical research (Fisher, 2004) shows that infatuation involves dopamine surges and serotonin depletion — the same neurochemical profile as OCD. The metaphor is not just poetic; it tracks a real neurological parallel.

References

Related Mappings