Time Is a Moving Object

conceptual-metaphor Embodied ExperienceTime and Temporality

Categories: cognitive-sciencelinguisticsphilosophy

What It Brings

One of two complementary metaphors for temporal experience, and the one where the observer stands still. Time moves toward you from the future, passes you in the present, and recedes behind you into the past. You are stationary; time flows. Events approach, arrive, and depart like objects on a conveyor belt or a river current.

Key structural parallels:

Where It Breaks

Expressions

Origin Story

Lakoff and Johnson discuss TIME IS A MOVING OBJECT alongside its complement (TIME IS STATIONARY AND WE MOVE THROUGH IT) as a case study in how two contradictory metaphors can coexist without conflict. English speakers switch between them constantly, often in the same conversation. “The weeks ahead” (time-moving) and “as we go through the years” (ego-moving) use incompatible spatial schemas, but no one notices the contradiction because both are grounded in the same embodied experience of motion and sequence.

The two metaphors correspond to what cognitive scientists later formalized as the “time-moving” and “ego-moving” frames (Gentner et al., 2002). The ambiguous question “Next Wednesday’s meeting has been moved forward two days — what day is it now?” reliably splits respondents: time-moving thinkers say Monday, ego-moving thinkers say Friday.

References

Related Mappings