The Mind Is A Brittle Object

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceMental Experience

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguistics

What It Brings

The mind cracks, breaks, shatters, and snaps. Where THE MIND IS A MACHINE structures how we think about cognitive function, this companion metaphor structures how we think about cognitive fragility. The mind is not just an operating system that can malfunction — it is a physical object that can be destroyed by force. Lakoff and Johnson pair these two metaphors in Chapter 6 of Metaphors We Live By as complementary ontological mappings that together cover the territory of mental experience.

Key structural parallels:

The Osaka archive notes that in this metaphor, “breaking is becoming inconsolably depressed” — the mapping is specifically between physical fracture and emotional devastation, not merely cognitive malfunction.

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson present THE MIND IS A BRITTLE OBJECT in Chapter 6 of Metaphors We Live By alongside THE MIND IS A MACHINE. They note that both are ontological metaphors — they give abstract mental experience the properties of physical objects — but they structure different aspects of that experience. The machine metaphor covers function and output; the brittle object metaphor covers vulnerability and destruction.

The pairing reveals something about how English speakers conceptualize mental health: it is simultaneously a question of performance (is the machine running?) and integrity (is the object intact?). These two framings coexist because they address different anxieties about the mind. The machine metaphor worries about productivity; the brittle object metaphor worries about survival.

References

Related Mappings