Theories Are Buildings
conceptual-metaphor Architecture and Building → Intellectual 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:
- Foundations — every theory needs a base. “That claim has no foundation” is a devastating criticism, and what it means is that the lower-level assumptions aren’t in place. The metaphor makes axioms and premises feel like load-bearing elements — remove them and everything above falls.
- Construction — theories are built, piece by piece. “She constructed a careful argument.” “We’re still building the framework.” The metaphor makes intellectual work feel cumulative and sequential: you can’t put up walls before the foundation is poured.
- Frameworks — the skeleton that holds everything together. “The theoretical framework” is so standard in academic writing that its architectural origin is invisible. But the metaphor matters: a framework is rigid, predetermined, and constraining. Ideas must fit within it.
- Collapse — the ultimate failure mode. “The theory collapsed under scrutiny.” “The whole argument fell apart.” Structural failure in buildings is sudden and catastrophic; the metaphor makes intellectual failure feel the same way, when in practice ideas usually erode gradually.
- Buttressing — supporting a weak point. “We need to shore up that argument.” “Additional evidence buttresses the claim.” The metaphor implies that intellectual weakness is local and fixable, like a cracked wall.
Where It Breaks
- Buildings are static; theories evolve — the metaphor favors finished structures over works in progress. A theory “under construction” sounds incomplete, not dynamic. This bias against intellectual provisionality makes scholars reluctant to share half-formed ideas.
- The foundation metaphor is misleading — buildings require literal foundations. Theories don’t. Many productive theoretical frameworks rest on contested assumptions and work perfectly well. Demanding foundations imports an unnecessary rigidity from architecture into epistemology.
- Collapse is too binary — buildings either stand or fall. Theories rarely collapse entirely; they get revised, qualified, absorbed into successor frameworks. Newtonian mechanics didn’t “collapse” — it became a special case. The building metaphor has no vocabulary for this kind of graceful degradation.
- The metaphor hides the inhabitants — buildings exist for people to use. Who uses a theory? Who lives inside it? The construction metaphor focuses on the builder (theorist) and the structure (theory) but neglects the people whose lives the theory shapes. This matters most in social sciences, where theories about people affect people.
- Renovation is suspect — in the building frame, renovation means the original was flawed. In intellectual work, revision is the normal mode of progress. But “we need to rebuild the theory from the ground up” sounds like condemnation, not healthy science.
Expressions
- “The foundation of his argument” — axioms as load-bearing base
- “That theory has no foundation” — absence of supporting premises as structural impossibility
- “She constructed a careful argument” — intellectual work as assembly
- “The argument collapsed” — refutation as structural failure
- “The theoretical framework” — the invisible skeleton of academic writing
- “We need to buttress that claim” — additional evidence as structural reinforcement
- “A towering intellect” — height as intellectual achievement
- “The edifice of Western philosophy” — the entire tradition as a single building
- “That argument doesn’t hold up” — load-bearing failure
- “We need to lay the groundwork” — preparation as foundation-pouring
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
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Metaphors We Live By (1980), Chapters 3-4
- Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Philosophy in the Flesh (1999) — expanded analysis of how building metaphors shape epistemology
- Kovecses, Z. Metaphor: A Practical Introduction (2002) — THEORIES ARE BUILDINGS as a textbook example of structural metaphor