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Une paradigmatique metaphorologique cherche a delimiter des champs a l'interieur desquels on peut supposer l'existence de metaphores absolues et a mettre a l'epreuve des criteres pour les reperer. Que ces metaphores soient appelees absolues signifie seulement qu'elles resistent a la pretention terminologique, qu'elles ne peuvent pas etre resorbees dans la conceptualite, non pas qu'une metaphore ne puisse pas etre remplacee ou plutot representee ou corrigee par une autre metaphore, plus precise. Par consequent, les metaphores absolues ont elles aussi une histoire. Elles ont de l'histoire dans un sens encore plus radical que les concepts, parce que la mutation historique d'une metaphore fait apparaitre la metacinetique des horizons de sens et des manieres de voir historiquement determinees a l'interieur desquels les concepts connaissent des modifications. Par ce rapport d'implication, la relation de la metaphorologie a l'histoire des concepts se definit comme une relation d'auxiliarite: la metaphorologie cherche a atteindre le soubassement de la pensee, le bouillon de culture des cristal-lisations systematiques, mais elle entend egalement faire prendre conscience avec quelle audace l'esprit s'anticipe lui-meme dans ses images et comment dans l'audace de la conjecture s'ebauche son histoire .

264 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

Hans Blumenberg

70 books62 followers
Hans Blumenberg (1920-1996) was a prominent German philosopher, known for his work in intellectual history and phenomenology. He is best remembered for his development of "metaphorology," a method that investigates the role of metaphors in shaping human thought, particularly in philosophy and culture. Blumenberg's most famous works include The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (1966) and The Genesis of the Copernican World (1975), where he explored the historical and philosophical implications of metaphors and their transformative effects on human understanding.
Born in Lübeck, Germany, Blumenberg's career spanned several prestigious academic positions, including professorships at the University of Hamburg, University of Gießen, and University of Münster. His intellectual contributions deeply influenced fields such as philosophy, literary studies, and history of ideas. He was particularly concerned with how philosophical concepts were deeply intertwined with metaphors and how these shaped the intellectual trajectories of entire periods, like the Renaissance or the Enlightenment.
Blumenberg's work focused not only on philosophy but also on the philosophy of technology, language, and aesthetics, drawing from a broad range of sources, including phenomenology, historical analysis, and myth theory. His exploration of "absolute metaphors" — ideas that transcend their original metaphorical contexts and become integral to philosophical and cultural systems — marked a major contribution to postwar German thought.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Slow Reader.
194 reviews
May 21, 2021
"[...] it is robust, crisp to the point of acerbity, and ought not to be consumed too quickly if one wants to avoid coming away from it with a buzzing head" .......incredible book. If you're looking where to start with Blumenberg's philosophy this is a great place to begin.

Every page had a dozen lines worth quoting but these are two that stuck with me:

in Plotinus's "deduction of the circular movement of the sky from the cosmic soul's imitation of pure Mind *the structure of metaphor itself* is *metaphysically hypostasized*. In its nature, in the 'language' of its being, the soul can neither grasp nor adequately 'replicate' the Mind; its mimesis can hit its target only in missing it, be true only by being different: in structural terms, it already preempts Cusanus's 'learned ignorance' (a fertile source of metaphysical metaphorics)"

and of course:

absolute metaphor "springs into a nonconceptualizable, conceptually unfilable gap and lacuna to express itself in its own way"
Profile Image for Linda.
142 reviews19 followers
March 14, 2022
Blumenberg explores the use of metaphors in philosophy through a number of base-metaphors, including truth as a force, knowledge as light and so on. By using a number of key themes he is able to show the ways that philosophers over time have relied on the connotative power to emphasise their ideas, including a ‘push’ of their theories of ‘enlightenment.’

Most interesting is that Blumenberg traces many “founding” or “background” metaphors back to similar ‘branches’ and ‘roots’ some twenty years before Lakoff and Johnson coined the idea of “conceptual” metaphors. Blumenberg demonstrates through examples from philosophical treatises that truth is a force that presses upon us, moves us, propels us, pushes, pulls, sets itself as a seal upon our soul, the Americans Lakoff and Johnson would later use colloquial student-chit-chat to come to a similar conclusion, showing that when someone says ‘our relationship is going nowhere’ or ‘we’re on the skids’ that love is a journey.

Overall, an interesting read that highlight both the usefulness and trickiness of metaphors in language, thought, philosophy and literature. I particularly liked his notion that metaphorology is essentially an experiment, with the emphasis on the experience. In testing out the boundaries, stretching it into infinity, or collapsing it in upon itself, what at first seems logical and viable eventually falls apart and the metaphor ceases to be of assistance, and in fact ceases to be a metaphor. It is the experience of the transcendence of logic that makes metaphor analysis both rewarding and impossible. Metaphorology will therefore, always be a journey not a destination.

Even if you don’t read the whole book, don’t skip the translator’s notes at the end, as they explain much of Blumenberg’s approach.
Profile Image for dv.
1,401 reviews60 followers
August 29, 2017
Testo affascinante tanto quanto arduo e rigoroso, non esattamente una classificazione di metafore, piuttosto un'analisi tematica dei pensieri filosofici che le hanno sorrette.
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