Aristotle on metaphor
<p>Aristotle is the first philosopher in the Western tradition to engage philosophically with the phenomenon of metaphor. Despite his pioneering role I will argue here that his account of metaphor has been widely misrepresented or simply misunderstood. This thesis reconstructs his theory of me...
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Format: | Abschlussarbeit |
Sprache: | English |
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2019
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author | Kurbel, PJ |
author2 | Castagnoli, L |
author_facet | Castagnoli, L Kurbel, PJ |
author_sort | Kurbel, PJ |
collection | OXFORD |
description | <p>Aristotle is the first philosopher in the Western tradition to engage philosophically with the phenomenon
of metaphor. Despite his pioneering role I will argue here that his account of metaphor has been widely
misrepresented or simply misunderstood. This thesis reconstructs his theory of metaphor against the
background of contemporary philosophy of metaphor. I proceed in three steps. Firstly, I develop an
interpretation of Aristotle’s remarks about proper and deviant words which lays the foundation for
Aristotelian metaphors. In a second step I apply these findings to the account of metaphor he develops in
Poetics 21. I argue that Aristotle provides a consistent classification of metaphor against a majority of
scholars who think he does not, that his account is not dependent on the notion of substitution, and that
he does not defend a semantic theory of metaphor. Finally, in my third chapter I make a fresh start at a
theory of metaphor in Aristotle, building primarily on his account of similarity as well as his discussion of
ways of seeing a portrait in the <em>Poetics</em> and <em>De memoria</em>. I conclude that Aristotle unites Gricean and noncognitivist strands in his thinking about metaphor, accounting both for the communicative as well as the
associative and creative side of metaphor.</p> |
first_indexed | 2024-03-07T04:39:45Z |
format | Thesis |
id | oxford-uuid:d13429bf-4138-4f57-bdad-a53f11e5591c |
institution | University of Oxford |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T04:39:45Z |
publishDate | 2019 |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:d13429bf-4138-4f57-bdad-a53f11e5591c2022-03-27T07:55:27ZAristotle on metaphorThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:d13429bf-4138-4f57-bdad-a53f11e5591cPhilosophyEnglishORA Deposit2019Kurbel, PJCastagnoli, LCoope, U<p>Aristotle is the first philosopher in the Western tradition to engage philosophically with the phenomenon of metaphor. Despite his pioneering role I will argue here that his account of metaphor has been widely misrepresented or simply misunderstood. This thesis reconstructs his theory of metaphor against the background of contemporary philosophy of metaphor. I proceed in three steps. Firstly, I develop an interpretation of Aristotle’s remarks about proper and deviant words which lays the foundation for Aristotelian metaphors. In a second step I apply these findings to the account of metaphor he develops in Poetics 21. I argue that Aristotle provides a consistent classification of metaphor against a majority of scholars who think he does not, that his account is not dependent on the notion of substitution, and that he does not defend a semantic theory of metaphor. Finally, in my third chapter I make a fresh start at a theory of metaphor in Aristotle, building primarily on his account of similarity as well as his discussion of ways of seeing a portrait in the <em>Poetics</em> and <em>De memoria</em>. I conclude that Aristotle unites Gricean and noncognitivist strands in his thinking about metaphor, accounting both for the communicative as well as the associative and creative side of metaphor.</p> |
spellingShingle | Philosophy Kurbel, PJ Aristotle on metaphor |
title | Aristotle on metaphor |
title_full | Aristotle on metaphor |
title_fullStr | Aristotle on metaphor |
title_full_unstemmed | Aristotle on metaphor |
title_short | Aristotle on metaphor |
title_sort | aristotle on metaphor |
topic | Philosophy |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kurbelpj aristotleonmetaphor |