Problems of Paraphrase: Bottom's Dream
Full Text: PDF doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.4148/biyclc.v3i0.22
Abstract
Philosophers and critics alike often contend that metaphors cannot or should not be paraphrased, ever. Yet a simple and decisive empirical argument — The Horse’s Mouth Argument—suffices to show that many metaphors can be paraphrased without violating the spirit in which they were put forward in the first place. This argument leaves us with urgent unanswered questions about the role of paraphrase in a more inclusive division of exegetical labor, about the tension between its notorious openendedness and its claim to restate something already stated, and
about the relation between the content of a paraphrase and the content (or contents) of the metaphor the paraphrase purports to explain. But it leaves us in a position to state such questions more clearly and hopefully than we could before.
about the relation between the content of a paraphrase and the content (or contents) of the metaphor the paraphrase purports to explain. But it leaves us in a position to state such questions more clearly and hopefully than we could before.
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.4148/biyclc.v3i0.22
The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication is published by New Prairie Press. ISSN 1944-3676


