How metaphors guide, teach and popularize science /edited by Anke Beger, Thomas H. Smith. - Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, (c)2020. - 1 online resource. - Figurative thought and language (FTL) ; volume 6 .

Includes bibliographies and index.

Social metaphors in cellular and molecular biology / Coordinating metaphors in science, learning and instruction : The case of energy / Metaphor and the popularization of contested technologies / To be or not to be : reconsidering the metaphors of apoptosis in press popularisation articles / Non-verbal and multimodal metaphors bring biology into the picture / Three metaphors in social science : use patterns and usefulness, separately and together / The brain is a computer and the mind is its program : following a metaphor's path from its birth to teaching philosophy decades later / Conclusion: When metaphors serve scientific ends / Theodore L. Brown -- Tamer G. Amin -- Bettina Bock von Wülfingen -- Julia T. Williams Camus -- José Manuel Ureña Gómez-Moreno -- Thomas H. Smith -- Anke Beger -- Thomas H. Smith and Anke Beger.

"Metaphors are essential to scientists themselves and strongly influence science communication. Through careful analyses of metaphors actually used in science texts, recordings, and videos, this book explores the essential functions of conceptual metaphor in the conduct of science, teaching of science, and how scientific ideas are promoted and popularized. With an accessible introduction to theory and method this book prepares scientists, science teachers, and science writers to take advantage of recent shifts in metaphor theories and methods. Metaphor specialists will find theoretical issues explored in studies of bacteriology, cell reproduction, marine biology, physics, brain function and social psychology. We see the degree of conscious or intentional use of metaphor in shaping our conceptual systems and constraining inferences. Metaphor sources include social structure, embodied experience, abstract or mathematical formulations. The results are sometimes innovative hypotheses and robust conclusions; other times pedagogically useful, if inaccurate, stepping stones or, at worst, misleading fictions"--



902726144X

2019058033


Communication in science.
Science--Study and teaching.
Science--Language.
Metaphor.


Electronic Books.

Q223 / .H696 2020