Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Metaphors Octopuses Live By? – A Cognitive Zoosemiotic Survey on Behavioral Mimicry as Evolutionary Contribution to Conceptual Metaphor Theory Cover

Metaphors Octopuses Live By? – A Cognitive Zoosemiotic Survey on Behavioral Mimicry as Evolutionary Contribution to Conceptual Metaphor Theory

By: Chiara Schumann  
Open Access
|Jan 2025

Abstract

I adopt Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT) as a cognitive linguistic concept in a zoosemiotic framework to study behavioral polymorphic deception in Thaumoctopus Mimicus. This offers new analytical tools to zoosemiotics and may inform and underpin CMT from an evolutionary standpoint. The lack of studies on metaphorical thought in non-human animals, despite urgent calls for more diverse multimodal examples exbodying cross-domain mappings, reveals a strong anthropocentric bias in cognitive linguistics. A comprehensive theory of language, however, should be consistent from a diachronic and phylogenetic angle.

The paper addresses how and for what metaphor, as an embodied cognitive phenomenon, may have emerged evolutionarily. It is posited that metaphor could have been present in animals before it became engrained in verbal language. This possibility is particularly relevant if we consider that lexical knowledge is not a prerequisite for metaphoric meaning-making, as the basic claim of CMT. I discuss that findings indicating embodied metaphoric processes in animals provide substantiation for cross-domain mappings as residing in cognitive systems.

Language: English
Page range: 1 - 21
Submitted on: Apr 7, 2024
|
Accepted on: Jun 18, 2024
|
Published on: Jan 2, 2025
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 3 issues per year

© 2025 Chiara Schumann, published by Palacký University Olomouc
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.