Culture itself most assuredly plays a strong role in how we choose/use metaphors.
Looking for universal metaphors might be interesting. I’m reasonably confident that “warm = nurturing” across a wide range of cultures, for example, or “path = plan”; I am less (but still significantly) confident about “big” = “important”, even less confident about “more = up”, etc.
If we broaden the thesis to include non-identical metaphors, my confidence increases wildly. For example, I’m extremely confident that every human culture has some metaphor for “plan” that involves a process for getting from an initial to a final state.
Culture itself most assuredly plays a strong role in how we choose/use metaphors.
Looking for universal metaphors might be interesting. I’m reasonably confident that “warm = nurturing” across a wide range of cultures, for example, or “path = plan”; I am less (but still significantly) confident about “big” = “important”, even less confident about “more = up”, etc.
If we broaden the thesis to include non-identical metaphors, my confidence increases wildly. For example, I’m extremely confident that every human culture has some metaphor for “plan” that involves a process for getting from an initial to a final state.