Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things

Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things
Author George Lakoff
Subject Cognitive linguistics
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Publication date
1987
Pages 632
ISBN 0-226-46803-8
OCLC 802823375

Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal About the Mind is a non-fiction book by the cognitive linguist George Lakoff. The book, first published by the University of Chicago Press in 1987, puts forward a model of cognition argued on the basis of semantics. The book emphasizes the centrality of metaphor, defined as the mapping of cognitive structures from one domain onto another, in the cognitive process.[1] Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things explores the effects of cognitive metaphors, both culturally specific and human-universal, on the grammar per se of several languages, and the evidence of the limitations of the classical logical-positivist or Anglo-American School philosophical concept of the category usually used to explain or describe the scientific method.

The book's title was inspired by the noun class system of the Dyirbal language, in which the "feminine" category includes nouns for women, water, fire, violence, and certain animals. Unknown to Lakoff, there was an ancient Greek proverb that also grouped three similar elements together as being dangerous. Erasmus quoted it in Latin (Adagia II, 2, 47 from 1536), "Ignis mare mulier, tria mala" (Fire, sea, and women, here be evils three).

See also

References

  1. "Defending Freedom". New Republic. October 16, 2006.


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