Rational Is Up; Emotional Is Down

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceIntellectual Inquiry

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticsphilosophy

What It Brings

Reason rises; emotion sinks. This orientational metaphor maps the reason/emotion distinction onto the vertical axis, placing rationality above and emotionality below. It is one of the most consequential metaphors in Western intellectual history, because it does not merely describe a spatial relationship — it encodes a value judgment. Up is better. Rational is up. Therefore rational is better.

Key structural parallels:

The Osaka archive notes that “rationality is necessary for well-being” and that the metaphor may connect to Enlightenment ethics where rationality is esteemed as virtuous.

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson present RATIONAL IS UP in Chapter 4 of Metaphors We Live By as part of their orientational metaphor inventory. They pair it with EMOTIONAL IS DOWN and ground it in what they call “physical and cultural basis”: the uniquely human capacity for rational thought that has been culturally valued as the defining human trait, combined with the fact that the head (seat of reason in Western tradition) is physically above the body (seat of emotion and appetite).

The metaphor has deep roots in Western philosophy. Plato placed reason at the top of the tripartite soul (the charioteer above the horses), and Enlightenment thinkers from Descartes to Kant treated reason as humanity’s highest faculty. The spatial metaphor both reflects and reinforces this tradition.

References

Related Mappings