Rational Is Up; Emotional Is Down
conceptual-metaphor Embodied Experience → Intellectual 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:
- Elevation as intellectual refinement — “high-level” discussion means abstract, theoretical, rational. “Low” discourse means crude, emotional, bodily. The metaphor equates abstraction with altitude and concreteness with depth.
- Rising above — to be rational is to transcend emotion. “He couldn’t rise above his emotions.” “She elevated the discussion.” “Keep your head above water.” The metaphor frames emotion as a medium (water, fog, muck) through which reason must ascend.
- Falling to — emotional responses are descents. “The discussion fell to the emotional level.” “He sank to personal attacks.” “She stooped to name-calling.” Emotion is a lower floor you fall to when you lose your grip on the higher one.
- Brow height — “highbrow” means intellectually sophisticated; “lowbrow” means crude or popular. The metaphor literally maps intellectual refinement onto the vertical position of a facial feature, as if rational people’s foreheads are physically higher.
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
- Emotion is not below reason — cognitive science has dismantled the reason/emotion hierarchy. Damasio’s somatic marker hypothesis shows that emotion is essential to rational decision-making, not its opposite. The metaphor places them on a vertical axis that doesn’t correspond to how cognition actually works.
- The metaphor devalues emotional intelligence — by placing emotion “below” reason, the metaphor makes emotional awareness seem like a lesser faculty. Empathy, intuition, and emotional attunement are “low” in this frame, which makes them hard to defend as intellectual virtues.
- “Rising above” emotions is not always wise — the metaphor frames emotional detachment as an achievement. But suppressing emotional responses can be pathological (alexithymia) rather than rational. The metaphor provides no vocabulary for the healthy integration of reason and emotion.
- The metaphor has a gender history — the reason/emotion hierarchy has historically mapped onto a gender hierarchy: men as rational (up), women as emotional (down). The spatial metaphor did not create this hierarchy, but it provided a frame that made it feel natural and spatial rather than political and constructed.
- Cultural specificity — the privileging of reason over emotion is a distinctly Western (and specifically post-Enlightenment) value. Confucian ethics, for example, does not subordinate emotion to reason in this way. The vertical metaphor naturalizes a culturally specific hierarchy.
Expressions
- “The discussion fell to the emotional level” — emotional discourse as descent from rational discourse
- “High-level intellectual discussion” — abstraction as altitude
- “He couldn’t rise above his emotions” — emotional transcendence as upward motion
- “Highbrow vs. lowbrow” — intellectual sophistication as vertical position of the forehead
- “Elevated discourse” — refined conversation as raised position
- “She stooped to personal attacks” — emotional argumentation as downward bending
- “Keep a level head” — rationality as maintaining horizontal equilibrium above the emotional flood
- “Don’t sink to their level” — emotional contagion as gravitational pull downward
- “Above such petty concerns” — rational detachment as altitude above small emotional matters
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
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Metaphors We Live By (1980), Chapter 4
- Lakoff, G., Espenson, J. & Schwartz, A. Master Metaphor List (1991), “Rational Is Up”
- Damasio, A. Descartes’ Error (1994) — the case against separating reason from emotion
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Philosophy in the Flesh (1999) — the embodied roots of Western rationalism