Theories Are Buildings

conceptual-metaphor Architecture and BuildingIntellectual Inquiry

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticsphilosophy

What It Brings

We construct theories, lay foundations, build frameworks, and watch arguments collapse. The building metaphor for intellectual work is so pervasive that it structures how we evaluate ideas: a theory is judged not by its truth but by its structural integrity. Does it have a solid foundation? Is it well-constructed? Can it support the weight of its claims?

Key structural parallels:

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss THEORIES ARE BUILDINGS in Chapters 3-4 of Metaphors We Live By as an example of how metaphors highlight and hide. The building frame highlights the structural aspects of theories (foundation, support, construction) and hides others (the social context of theory-making, the people affected by theories, the aesthetic dimensions of intellectual work).

The metaphor’s dominance in Western intellectual culture is visible in the word “structure” itself — from Latin struere, to build. When we talk about the “structure” of an argument, we are already inside the building metaphor. There is no neutral term for how ideas relate to each other that doesn’t borrow from some physical domain.

References

Related Mappings