Topic 3. What is analogy? Reading 1, pp. 3-33

Assumptions:

-No thought without concepts

-No concepts without analogy

Examples of concepts by analogy-making

  1. Band - a piece of cloth

-coloured strip on a surface

-smallish set of musicians

-a wedding ring

-a range of frequencies,
energies, prices or ages;

each of them may have (potentially) related
sub-meanings – types of wedding bands
(or chairs, shoes, dogs, teapots, the letter “A”)

  1. I. band, chair, teapot, letter ‘A’--- unlimited number of meanings vs.

II. prime number, DNA --- what is shared by all their members is
expressible precisely and unambiguously.

  1. Zeugmas = syllepsis (figures of speech, humorous effects) --- more than one meaning of a word is exploited in a sentence although the word appears only once.

-I’ll meet you in five minutes and in the garden.

-‘You are always welcome in my home’, he said in English and all sincerity.

-The bartender gave me a wink and a drink.

-The book was clothbound and unfortunately out of print.

-I go to work by car, and other times on foot. (go; Polish: jadę, idę; German: fahren, gehen. Polish: 5 grammatical genders marked on verbs in the past tense: robił, robiła, robiło, robili, robiły).

Each language has the right and the responsibility to decide where it draws distinctions in a semantic space. Resemblances between acts allow a language to describe them all by the same label (go, made) (L. Wittgenstein 1953 --- family resemblance)

People who share a common native language accept as natural and self-evident the conceptual network handed to them by their language.

Example: ‘play’

-Sylwia plays tennis, monopoly and violin.

-Sylwia gra w tenisa, monopoly ina skrzypcach.

-Mandarin: different labels for stringed instruments, wind, guitar and piano, drums.

The nature of categorization

Traditional view:

-Entities (dogs, cats, ...) --- unambiguously assigned to mental boxes (categories) (’dogs’, ‘cats’, ...)

Objective, observer-independent, reliable process

Hofstadter/Sander:

-Category – mental structure created over time that evolves and contains info in an organized way, allowing access to it.

-Categorization --- graded, gray, shaded linking of an entity (situation) to a prior category in one’s mind; gives the feeling of understanding, anticipating future events.

What analogy is not?

(1)Proportional analogies: one pair of numbers has the same ratio as another pair does
A/B = C/D 10/5 = 8/4. This is extended to words and concepts:

tomato/red = broccoli/green

sphere/circle = cube/square

Aristotle’s logical syllogism: All men are mortal

Socrates is a man

______

Socrates is mortal

Criticism: proportionality deals with quantities, analogy deals with concepts

Aristotle’s analogy - a type of formal reasoning such as deduction, induction, abduction

(2)Deep insights of genius – a cognitive activity for the chosen ones.

(3)Classification – putting things into fixed and rigid mental boxes (biology, zoology, ...). Labelled concepts: ‘dog’, ‘cat’, ‘contradiction’

What is analogy?

-The very essence of thought

-Fundamental and widespread cognitive process

-Below the conscious threshold

-An automatic process

  • The triggering of memories by analogy – the essence of being human
  • Zeugmas reflect the ubiquity and uniformity of categorization by analogy

(1)The asparagus tips and the potato dumplings were delicious.

(2)The asparagus tips and the after-dinner witticisms were delicious.

(3)The asparagus tips and the expression of surprise on Anna’s face were delicious.

-Non-stop categorization through analogy-making (from mundane to sophisticated ---- understanding sentences as non-zeugmatic (1) to fully zeugmatic (3). It reflects fluidity of thinking.

-Labelled and unlabelled concepts: “that time I found myself locked outside my house in bitterly freezing weather because the door slammed shut by accident.”

-It allows/predicts instant inference making – introducing new mental elements into a situation that one is facing:

  • See a child crying --- the child is distressed
  • See set table --- meal will be soon
  • See a dog --- it may bark, bite, has a stomach

Mindversus Computer

-Distractibility of attention - Rationality

-Fatigue - Size

-Imprecision of sensory organism - Reliability

-Serious thought - Impossibility of tracing ideas

-Translation

  • Our thought, though slow and vague, are reliable, relevant, insight-giving. Newborns with no past have to build categories from scratch (inborn categories?)
  • Analogy works at all levels of communication

Conversation

(1)Need for a bigger military budget --- ideas --- sentences --- phrases --- words --- letters/sounds

(2)Need for a smaller military budget --- auxiliary ideas --- variation --- stock phrases --- syntactic patterns --- standardized words

(3)Bye-bye conversation at the Bayhs (gramma --- grammar)

Humans compare what’s happening to them now with what happened to them in the past --- incessant flow of analogies (e.g. ‘One should never try to catch a falling knife’ – huge, irrepressible forces against which one has no power and which would carry one off to one’s doom if one were to rush as to try to stop them)

Follow-up exercise:

Give your own examples of:

(1)Proportional analogy

(2)Insightful, ingenious analogy

(3)Classification

(4)Hofstadter/Sander’s analogy