“Both metaphor and simile depend on our innate capacity for seeing correspondences. Such is an essential part of our ability to make sense of the world. Observing (perceiving) that ‘this resembles that’ (in abstract as well as visible ways) is an intellectual process central to the narratives we spin about our lives, about others, about natural processes, about any spiritual (religious) beliefs we might have. We use this intellectual process seriously in trying to explain things, and unselfconsciously in our everyday language. It is also an essential trait of humour.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“Success is the ability to effectively utilize your talents or concepts to make a significant impact.”
Source: The Kind of Substance You Need For Your Success
“There are as many metaphorical subtleties in architecture as there are in language, maybe more. The metaphorical power of architecture is inescapable and has many dimensions.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“We develop our architecture through metaphor. In the distant past we looked to those places we recognised and experienced in nature for ideas – the shelter of a cave, the shade of a tree, the original refuge of the womb, our own proud vertical stance and point of view, the communal circle we make with our friends in a forest clearing… – and sought to emulate them in our architecture.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“The general argument is that metaphors live at the conceptual core of architecture; but those metaphors are of many and varied kinds, which change and grow as you try to pin them down.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“…there is a particular boldness in metaphor, which is not to be found in the same degree in any of the figures of rhetoric. Without any thing like an explicit comparison, and commonly without any warning or apology, the name of one thing is obtruded upon us, for the name of another quite different, though resembling in some quality. The consequence of this is, that as there is always in this trope an apparent at least, if it cannot be called a real impropriety, and some degree of obscurity, a new metaphor is rarely to be risked.”
Source: The Philosophy of Rhetoric
“It's like the tide, Jo, when it turns it goes slowly--but it can't be stopped.”
Source: Little Women
“But what really matters is what's under the hood, and without continued attention to routine maintenance and repairs, it isn't long before the same old engine spoils the new ride.”
Source: Broken: My Story of Addiction and Redemption
“I was thinking about what she aid about waves, and it made me sad because I knew that her little wave was not going to last and soon she would join the sea again, and even though I know you can’t hold on to water, I still gripped her fingers a little more tightly to keep her from leaking away,”
Source: A Tale for the Time Being
“The moon can still exist without the night. Isn’t that something.”
Source: Hey Humanity