“...: through witty riddles and unsuspected metaphors, though ti tells us things differently to the way they are, as if it were lying, it actually obliges us to examine them more closely, and it makes us say: Ah, this is just as things are, and I dint know it.”
Source: The Name of the Rose
“Is there more meat?” I asked.
Ida Belle nodded. “I’m pretty sure there’s a black hole in the bottom of Gertie’s trunk and meat is coming through it from another planet. We’ve hardly made a dent.”
Source: Hurricane Force
“We might think of metaphor as a device belonging to the poetry of words but metaphor can also be non-verbal – visual, spatial, experiential… Metaphor is essential to the poetry of architecture too.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“…metaphors in architecture are generally thought of not as treacherous sources of delusion but as (to use an architectural metaphor) cornerstones of creativity.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“In a creative activity such as architecture, metaphor is less a threat to objective truth and more (to use another architectural metaphor) an arena of conceptual vitality – an arena being a performance area shareable with others.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“The metaphors of architecture are protean ghosts haunting a many roomed labyrinth. They morph and fuse, subtly mutating perceptions; like distorting glass. When you look more closely you realise that the labyrinth of architectural ideology is ruled by those protean ghosts.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“In language, metaphors tend to occur in passing; in architecture they are more consequential.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“All architecture is, metaphorically, a shadow cast on a cave wall. Architecture is a version of the truth – a version of sense – proposed by the architect and realised in the physical form of buildings and the identification of places for inhabitation.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“But that is the danger of metaphors: they can be overstretched, innocently or intentionally, as an attempt at polemic or rhetorical advantage.”
Source: Metaphor: an exploration of the metaphorical dimensions and potential of architecture
“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