Abstract

Walter Ong, George Ewart Evans, Walter Benjamin, and others have said words to the effect that the modern mind now only sees things literally and materially, and has lost the metaphoric vision of old. Although metaphor continues to enjoy some currency, for literal-minded thinkers it is usually relegated to occasional use. A secondary form of orality persists to some degree in everyday conversation in literate culture. However, in the prior oral culture, the metaphoric vision encompassed everything seen, heard, felt, smelt, tasted, thought, and spoken of. It was not just constantly taking measurement from experiences stored in parallel understandings in the back brain, but part of its demand for certainty and truth was by the projected use of imagination. Such metaphoric extensions into imagination produce visions of understanding, for example, of the intangible — a grasp upon those things for which we have no visible image. Despite slowly evolving physical changes, the dominance of oral modes of expressiv...

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