George Lakoff - Metaphorical Thought
George Lakoff - Metaphorical Thought
George Lakoff - Metaphorical Thought
George Lakoff
The University of California at Berkeley
and
The Rockridge Institute
This research was commissioned by the Benton Foundation and the FrameWorks Institute
for the Global Interdependence Initiative, a project directed by the Aspen Institute,
Benton Foundation, and Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
William Kristol is editor of the Weekly Standard. Robert Kagan is a senior associate
at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The Clinton administration has been trying to frame the foreign policy debate for the
2000 election in the simplest possible terms: It's Clintonian internationalism versus
Republican isolationism. Samuel Berger, the national security advis er, offered the fullest
version of this thesis last Thursday, arguing that the Senate's rejection of the
Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty means we have returned once again to the "old
debate" of the 1930's.
It is true that some Republicans want the United States to pull back from its overseas
commitments and stay out of messy conflicts in the Balkans, East Timor and elsewhere.
But the leading Republican Presidential candidates -- George W. Bush and John
McCain -- are both internationalists and free-traders. Both believe in American leadership
and global responsibilities. Both supported intervention in the Persian Gulf at the
beginning of this decade and in Kosovo at the end. No matter who wins next November,
American foreign policy after 2001 is going to be characterized by some version of
internationalism.
The real debate in the coming year will be: What brand of internationalism? This is
the debate between the internationalism of Theodore Roosevelt and that of Woodrow
Wilson, between the internationalism of Ronald Reagan and that of Jimmy Carter.
The Clinton administration has placed itself squarely in the tradition of Presidents
Wilson and Carter, and never more so than in Mr. Berger's speech, entitled "American
Power: Hegemony, Isolationism or Engagement." Mr. Berger is opposed to American
hegemony and decries Republican calls for increased defense spending. The true test of
leadership, he argues, is not whether the United States remains militarily powerful, but
whether it signs onto international conventions such as the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty and the Climate Change Treaty, provides enough money to global poverty
programs and supports the United Nations.
It is on these matters, Mr. Berger argues, "that our most fundamental interests are at
stake." Mr. Berger derides those who worry about the threat posed by China or Russia as
"nostalgic" for the cold war. In the Clinton administration's world, there are no enemies
or even potential enemies. There are only potential partners in the search for what Mr.
Berger calls an international "common good."
This is the kind of utopian internationalism that the Democratic Party rejected under
the hardheaded leadership of Harry Truman and Dean Acheson but embraced again after
Vietnam. It is the internationalism of Jimmy Carter, squeamish and guilty about
American power and content to base America's security, and the world's security, on arms
control agreements rather than on American arms. This is the internationalism which in
the late 1970's and early 1980's favored the SALT II agreement and the "nuclear freeze"
and opposed the Reagan arms buildup and the Strategic Defense Initiative.
Republicans in the coming election will likely propose a very different kind of
internationalism. In the tradition of Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, they will argue
that the United States can and should lead the world to a better future, one built around
American principles of freedom and justice -- but only if it has the power and the will to
use that power.
Republicans will argue that American security cannot be safeguarded by
international conventions. Instead, they will ask Americans to face this increasingly
dangerous world without illusions. They will argue that American dominance can be
sustained for many decades to come, not by arms control agreements, but by augmenting
America's power and, therefore, its ability to lead.
President Clinton may enjoy calling Republicans isolationists, but a year from now,
Democrats will be running against the party of Reagan. It looks as if they plan to run as
the party of Jimmy Carter.
As we shall see, this document is subtler than it appears on the surface. It appeals
to a general conservative worldview and to certain deep metaphors that have long
shaped U.S. foreign policy. And it is a response to specific policy initiatives by
the Clinton administration that depend on very different general metaphors. The
broader metaphor systems being supported and decried will become clearer as we
proceed.
President Clinton and Samuel Berger had attempted to frame the conservative
rejection of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test ban Treaty as isolationism as
compared to their internationalism. It was a crude and misleading attempt. The
conservative opposition had a very different basis, which will become clear as we
proceed. Kristol and Sagan took the opportunity to try some strategic reframing of
their own: military superiority versus a foolish dependence on unenforceable
international agreements; power as the only real security versus a soft- headed
search for the common good.
The metaphor systems that Kristol and Sagan argue for and against have
everything to do with the Global Interdependence Initiative, but not in any
simple-minded way. Both systems present problems for the GII, but different
problems for very different reasons. The Kristol-Sagan piece, when seen through
the lens of our metaphor systems, is a poignant reminder that the GII is not an
easy project. It comes up against deep-seated understandings of the world that are
there in the very synapses of our policy- makers, as well as a significant segment
of the both the media and the public. Supporters of GII need to know in detail
just where those problem areas lie.
The Global Interdependence Initiative must not mistake its work as an exercise in
public relations. It is not a matter of finding the right image or slogan. It requires
serious rethinking of the very concepts in which foreign policy is framed. It
requires a change in what is taught in graduate schools throughout the country.
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And it requires an approach to communication far deeper and more thorough than
traditional approaches to public relations and the media. Such an approach will, of
necessity, require those who support, criticize and promote foreign policies to
think in new ways both about the rationale for the policies themselves and about
how they explain their views to the public. This essay is a step in that new
direction, one that will be followed by more intensive research in the coming
months.
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Cold War, and at the implications for the GII. We will distinguish those foreign
policy ideas that seem to support GII from those that don't.
A Bit of Terminology
The subject matter that is being conceptualized via the metaphor is called the
target domain of the metaphor. In a metaphor, a mode of reasoning from a source
domain is used to reason about the target domain. The conceptual metaphor itself
consists of a mapping between elements of a sour ce domain and elements of a
target domain. When an inference is drawn within a source domain and is applied
via the metaphor to a target domain, we call that an "entailment" of the metaphor.
Conceptual metaphors become important in situations where they ha ve
entailments for action.
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1. Conservative and Progressive Moral Systems
Or, How Could the United Nations Be Seen as an Immoral
Institution?
A telling indicator of problems in U.S. foreign policy was the refusal by
conservatives in the U.S. Congress to authorize the payment of the debt owed by
the United States to the United Nations. At first the problem was thought to be a
matter of changing public opinion about the United Nations. But Stephen Kull's
and Meg Bostrom's polling data revealed that the American public already had
positive views about the U.N. and about paying the debt. The U.N. problem lay
not with the public but with its elected leaders — a conservative majority in both
houses of Congress. This section of the report addresses the conceptual nature of
the conservative-progressive split.
Moral Politics (Lakoff, 1996) asked a number of difficult questions:
?? Why do conservatives and progressives talk past each other rather than with
each other?
?? What makes their respective views on diverse issues like abortion, taxation,
guns, the environment, the arts and so on hang together in a coherent whole?
?? What cognitive structures characterize the conservative and progressive
discourse?
?? What kinds of conservatives and progressives are there? What differences are
there within the categories?
The answer that emerged from the study was unexpected: Both used a common
metaphor, namely, the Nation as Family — but with opposite versions of what
constitutes an ideal family. For conservatives, it is a Strict Father family, while
for progressives it is a Nurturant Parent family.
Conservative Values
The Strict Father family:
The father is the leader of the family: He is responsible for supporting and
protecting the family. He is the moral authority whose job is to teach his kids right
from wrong by disciplining them (physically) when they do wrong. It is assumed
that punishment (and only punishment) works and that it is a parent's moral duty
and an expression of love ("tough love") to punish their children when they do
wrong. The assumption is that only through physical discipline will children
internalize moral values and become internally disciplined.
Because the world is dangerous and difficult, children must learn to become self-
reliant by becoming self-disciplined and pursuing their self- interest. When
children reach the age of maturity, they are on their own and parents should not
meddle in their lives.
Important metaphors for morality accompany this model and define strict
morality.
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1. Moral Strength: Morality is being upright. Evil is a force in the world. You
must be morally strong to keep from falling to the force of evil. If you are
morally weak, you are bound to fall; that is, you are bound to do evil, and so
moral weakness is itself a form of immorality. Character is inherent moral
strength; if you have character you will act morally. How does one build
moral strength? By self-discipline and self-denial. Competition is thus
important for building character, since it forces one to be self-disciplined.
Getting something unearned contributes to moral weakness, and hence is
immoral.
2. Moral Authority: Morality is obedience to and respect for moral authority.
Those in authority must appear moral or they will not command respect and
obedience, and widespread immorality will result.
3. Moral Self-Interest : This is a version of Adam Smith's economic metaphor —
If everyone seeks their own profit, then the profit of all will be maximizes.
Add to that the common metaphor Well-being Is Wealth, and you get: If
everyone seeks their own well-being, then the well-being of all will be
maximized. According to this metaphor, it is immoral to be a "do-gooder,"
since not seeking your own self- interest upsets the system and does not
maximize well-being for all.
4. The Moral Order: In a moral world, the moral are those in power. There is
thus a natural hierarchy of morality based on forms of power. Most
conservatives have the following version of the hierarchy:
God above man.
Man above nature.
Adults above children.
America above other countries.
Western culture above nonwestern culture.
Citizens above immigrants.
The hierarchy continues for some:
Men above women.
Whites above nonwhites.
Christians above nonchristians.
Straights above gays.
5. Moral Health: Immorality is a contagion, a disease that can spread. Thus,
children should not be exposed to immorality. Hence, the V-chip, moving to
the suburbs to protect the children, locking up drug users and so on.
The highest value in this moral system is supporting the moral system itself.
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In the Nation as Family metaphor, the government is parent, self-reliant citizens
are mature children, and non-self-reliant citizens are dependent children.
Conservative politics is an application of strict morality to politics. The Strict
Father family is the model of the family promoted by the conservative family
values movement (e.g., Focus on the Family, the Family Research Council and
The Promise Keepers).
In this metaphorical system, many things follow about politics:
?? The government should not meddle in the lives of self-reliant citizens (the
mature children). It should impose discipline on those citizens who are not
self-reliant (the immature children). Its proper role is protecting the nation
from outsiders, punishing criminals and supporting the mo ral order.
?? Social programs are immoral since they give people something they didn't
earn and so create dependency instead of instilling self-discipline. Supporting
social programs is being a "do-gooder," which is immoral.
?? Profit is a reward for self-discipline, and is therefore moral. Progressive
taxation punishes the most moral people, that is, those who are becoming self-
reliant through self-discipline and seeking their self- interest.
?? Private charity promotes this moral system in two ways: It displays the moral
order in which those with more than enough display their morality by giving
to those who do not have enough. Those who receive charity are supposed to
be grateful and thereby acknowledge the morality of those who are
sufficiently self- reliant not to need charity. It permits the promotion of the
moral system through control of who gets what charity and what charity is
given for.
?? The environment is a resource for human use. Environmental regulation is
therefore meddling on the part of the government with those who are
(morally) seeking to advance their self- interest.
?? The nation must maintain its place in the moral order; it must be strong and
maintain its sovereignty and hegemony. It is immoral to give up any of its
authority to other nations, especially nonwestern nations. That would be a
violation of the moral order.
?? Indigenous cultures in other nations are inferior to western culture, and it is to
everyone's benefit for western culture to be brought to them. Conservative
Christians have a corresponding view about converting nonchristians in other
cultures to Christianity.
This is an oversimplified version, of course. There are many types of
conservatives. Some are pragmatic and put pragmatic values over these values.
Some have special concerns that override the general perspective. (For a
discussion of varieties of conservatives, see Lakoff, 1996, Chapter 17.)
Conservative theorists and strategists fully understand the role of the Strict Father
family and Strict Morality in conservative politics, largely through the operation
of conservative think tanks over the past four decades. They have helped to bring
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these largely unconscious models to consciousness and to provide an effective
language for them. Progressives have not been as insightful in such matters.
Progressive think tanks have not devoted themselves to making conscious the
progressive model of an ideal family and the corresponding moral system.
However, such models do reside in the cognitive unconscious of progressives.
Here is an account of the corresponding models for progressives.
Progressive Values
The Nurturant Parent family:
Both parents are equally responsible for supporting and running the family. The
job of parents is to nurture their children and raise them to be nurturers.
Nurturance requires two central values: empathy and responsibility.
First, empathy. To nurture a child, you have to know what a child needs. You
have to be able to distinguish what each of a baby's cries means, you have to be
able to get a feel for what your child is feeling. Similarly, children who are to
become nurturers must learn empathy for others.
Next, responsibility. To nurture a child, you have to be completely responsible for
both yourself and the child. You can't take care of a child if you aren't taking care
of yourself. Similarly, children raised to be nurturers have to learn to be
responsible both for themselves and for others. This is the value in progressive
households of teaching social responsibility
These two primary values have many consequences: Because people are not
likely to want others to be happier than they are or to be fulfilled when they are
unfulfilled, happiness and fulfillment in life are an important aspect of nurturance
— for both parent and child. Because empathy requires knowing another's needs,
full, open, two-way communication is necessary and becomes a central value.
Empathy also implies fairness to others. Responsibility for a child implies
protection: nurturant parents want to protect their children from dangers — not
just crime and drugs, but unhealthy conditions, cigarettes, cars without seat belts,
pollution, unscrupulous businessmen and so on. Responsibility also requires
competence, both at being a parent and at being a provider. Education thus
becomes a value in a nurturant home. Because raising a child is not a solitary
matter, the building of social ties and community is a central value. Cooperation
rather than competition is stressed.
Are there moral absolutes? Of course. Help, don't harm. Be nurturant. What is
character? The capacity for empathy and responsibility.
When children do something wrong — something harmful — what is the proper
response? Whenever possible, it is restitution rather than retribution. Have the
child do something positive to make up for doing harm. Restitution rather than
punishment balances the moral books.
The Nurturant Parent model comes with a Nurturant Morality, with the
corresponding central values: empathy, care, responsibility (both personal and
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social), open communication and honesty, fairness, restitution as justice and
protection of the helpless. The moral absolute is this: Be nurturant in all the ways
discussed above. The highest moral value is being responsible to those who need
care.
This model of family life and morality, when applied to the Nation as Family
yields a progressive form of politics. Citizens are expected to be both personally
and socially responsible. Government is expected to be empathetic towards those
who need help and care and to be responsible to them. It is expected to promote
the health, education and fulfillment of its citizens. As a protector, its job is to
protect citizens from invasion, crime and other forms of harm, including
pollution, unscrupulous business practices, things that are unhealthy (e.g.,
tobacco), unhealthy working and living conditions and unfair conditions. The
central metaphor for nature is that Nature is a Nurturer, to be loved, respected and
cared for. The Earth is correspondingly seen as a home. This defines a
commitment to the environme nt.
1. There are, of course many kinds of progressives. As in the case of
conservatives, there are pragmatic progressives, who are willing to sacrifice
some of these principles for the sake of pragmatism — getting things to work,
maximizing what you can get. And, of course, there are many types of
progressives. Here are some of the main types: Social progressives, who see
most issues in terms of economics and class, and concentrate mostly on
eliminating economic inequalities and class differences.
2. Advocates of identity politics, who see the first priority as helping previously
or currently oppressed populations — women, and racial and ethnic groups,
gays, and others.
3. Biocultural progressives, whose focus is on preserving and enhancing the
environment and indigenous cultures.
4. Classic liberals, who focus on civil liberties, personal freedom and equality of
opportunity.
5. Radicals, whose main concern is to oppose authoritarianism in any form,
whether it stems from state power, large corporations or other centers of
control.
It is common for each of these to see progressive politics mainly or solely
through their own lenses, and hence not to be aware of the overall progressive
moral system and its basis in a nurturant model of the family. Indeed, many
progressives are so unaware of their own overall unconscious value system that
they have come to cede morality and the family to conservatives — even though
they have clear family and moral values.
A complicating factor among progressives is the existence of an ends-means split
in some cases. That is, there are progressives with nurturant ends who use strict
means. They stress an authoritarian hierarchy, discipline and punishment in their
means.
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On the whole, very little of this is understood by progressives. Because the
highest moral value for progressives is helping needy individuals, progressive
foundations have not provided for the building of an overall understanding of the
moral umbrella holding progressive politics together, nor have there been
strategic attempts to unify progressives under the existing moral umbrella. The
result is that conservatives have been far more effective in pressing their political
and moral agendas. As we shall see, this has a major effect on the possibilities for
the Global Interdependence Initiative.
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2. Common Metaphors for Relations with Other Countries
We now turn to the second element of our background study: the commonplace
metaphors used in the United States to conceptualize our relations with other
countries. These are used by ordinary people and the media, as well as by policy-
makers. The World Community metaphor is the most common of these. In it,
nations are conceptualized as individual people living in a world community. A
nation-person's territory is its home. There are also backyards. ("We don't want
missiles in our backyard.")
The community has neighborhoods, and nearby countries are conceptualized as
neighbors. International relationships are seen as social relationships. Some
countries are friends or at least friendly; others are enemies or merely hostile.
Some are seen as rogue nations, who do not abide by community norms. Regional
military forces (e.g., NATO) are seen as forces that "police" the neighborhood.
Trade treaties are seen as business partnerships, with the nations involved as
"trading partners."
When a nation is conceptualized as a person, how is the self- interest of a person
extended metaphorically to a nation to produce the metaphorical concept of the
National Interest? It is in the interest of a person to be healthy and strong. Under
the National Interest metaphor, health is economic health and strength is military
strength. That is, it is in the national interest for a nation as a whole to be wealthy
and well-armed. Thus, issues of pursuing self- interest for a na tion tend to center
around national wealth and military strength.
The World Community metaphor is also typically extended by another metaphor,
that Maturity is Industrialization. The industrialized nations are grown-ups, non-
industrialized nations are "und eveloped" and those in the process of
industrializing are "developing." Those nations that have difficulty industrializing
are often seen as "backward nations," as if they were retarded children.
The Maturity is Industrialization metaphor has sometimes been combined with
the Strict Father family model, where strict parents dictate what is right and
wrong, instill discipline and punish children when they do wrong.
Correspondingly, the industrialized nations dictate to the developing and non-
industrialized nations what is right and wrong about how they should run their
economies; they instill financial discipline (through the International Monetary
Fund and World Bank); and they financially punish the developing and non-
industrialized nations when those nations do not do as they are told (for their own
good, of course). It has become natural to think of Third World nations, via this
metaphor, as recalcitrant children. And of course, such "children" should not be
dictating terms to grown-ups, say, through U.N. votes.
What Is Hidden
A crucial part of metaphor analysis is understanding clearly what is hidden by a
system of conceptual metaphors. In the case of the Nations Are Persons metaphor
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and its extension to the Maturity is Industrialization metaphor, a number of
crucial points are hidden:
?? Ethnic, racial or religious divisions within a country: For example, the Hutus
and Tutsis in Rwanda; the Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo; the Shiites, Sunnis,
and Kurds in Iraq. In recent years, major conflicts have erupted within
nations, yet the metaphor does not recognize the participants in the conflict.
?? Individual people: Effects on governments, their leader, or the nation as a
whole may be very different than effects on individuals. Thus sanctions
against Iraq — the count ry — had little effect on the government or its leader,
but had drastic effects on individual people.
?? The ecology: The ecology is simply left out of the metaphor.
?? Local culture: The cultural importance of Kosovo to the Serbs would not show
up in such a metaphor. This metaphor hid the cultural significance of the
divide between rich and poor in the Islamic world in the case of the Gulf War.
It s extremely important for GII to distinguish between the way the World
Community metaphor is realized for most Americans and American policy-
makers and the way it is realized in the United Nations.
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3. Some Expert Metaphors
The third element in our background survey consists of several expert metaphors.
We will discuss: Clausewitz's Metaphors, the Rational Actor metaphor, the
Balance of Power metaphor, the War-as-Fire metaphor, and the Path-to-
Democracy metaphor.
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1. The Causal Transfer metaphor: An effect is an object transferred from a cause
to an affected party.
For example, sanctions are seen as ''giving'' Iraq economic difficulties.
Correspondingly, economic difficulties for Iraq are seen as ''coming from'' the
sanctions. This metaphor allows us to conceptualize purposeful actions as
transfers of objects.
2. The Exchange Metaphor for Value: The value of something is what you are
willing to exchange for it.
Whenever we ask whether it is ''worth'' engaging in some action, such as going to
war to achieve some purpose, we are using the Exchange Metaphor for Value plus
the Causal Transfer metaphor.
Risks
A risk is an action taken to achieve a positive effect, where the outcome is
uncertain and where there is also a significant probability of a negative effect.
Since Causal Commerce allows one to see positive effects of actions as ''gains''
and negative effects as ''costs,'' it becomes natural to see a risky action
metaphorically as a financial risk of a certain type, namely, a gamble.
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The Rational Choice System
Within the social sciences, especially in economics, it is common to see a
"rational" person as someone who acts in his own self- interest, that is, to
maximize his own well-being. Hard-core advocates of this view may even see
altruistic action as being in one’s self- interest if there is a value in feeling
righteous about altruism and in deriving gratitude from others.
In the Causal Commerce system, where well-being is wealth, this view of
rationality translates metaphorically into maximizing gains and minimizing
losses. The fundamental metaphor linking "rationality" in this sense with the
Causal Commerce system is Rationality is Profit Maximization. The Rational
Choice metaphor system is an attempt to mathematicize this idea.
This metaphor system is complex and is described in very considerable detail in
Philosophy in the Flesh (Lakoff and Johnson, 1999, Chapter 23). The Rational
Choice system has four parts:
1. A set of symbols and axioms characterizing the system's pure mathematics —
which is a mixture of formal language theory and probability theory. This is
the level at which the mathematics is done. What follows is a metaphorical
interpretation of the mathematics.
2. Two metaphors, the Branching Paths metaphor and the Payoff metaphor —
which map the symbols in the pure mathematics onto a person moving from
location to location along a branching path making choices as to which way to
go at each branch. As the mover reaches the end of a path, he receives a
particular payoff associated with that location. (Lakoff and Johnson, 1999:
522-525)
3. Two commonplace metaphors, the Event Structure metaphor and the Well-
Being is Wealth metaphor —mapping the locations onto states, the motions
onto actions, the choice of paths onto choices between actions, and payoff
received onto a degree of well-being. The result is a sequence of choices of
actions resulting in a degree of well-being (a gain or loss). The sequence of
actions leading to the greatest overall gain (or, failing that, the least loss) is
called "rational."
4. A special metaphor — mapping the person acting onto something else, say a
country or a firm. A collection of metaphors specifying what is to count as a
"gain" or a "loss" in a given application to a situation.
This basic structure, to which can be added various additional factors (e.g., Nash
equilibria), characterizes a mathematical theory of rational choice.
The theory of rational choice is an expert's metaphor system, used in making
strategic decisions in economics and in international relations. The metaphors are,
as usual, part of the cognitive unconscious, and so the models are taken as literally
true.
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Neorealist Metaphors
During the Cold War, a set of metaphors for foreign policy was adopted that
implicitly characterized what Hans Morgenthau had called "realism," the idea that
the military and economic power to survive and thrive were at the heart of foreign
policy. During the Cold War, with the advent of nuclear weapons, a neorealism
evolved. It too stressed survival through military and economic power, but to
avoid nuclear war, it stressed a balance of power.
Within academic political theory, the main architect and chief advocate of
neorealism was Kenneth Waltz (1959, 1979, 1993). His books, Man, The State,
and War and Theory of International Relations, set the standards for neorealist
thought. For this reason, a study of his metaphors provides a fair idea of the mode
of metaphorical thought involved in neorealism. Here are the major Waltzian
metaphors.
Morgenthau viewed the United States and the Soviet Union as equally strong states,
with the U.S. allies tilting the balance somewhat.
In the metaphorical language of the balance of power one might
say, rather crudely but not without truth, that, while in the Russian
scale there is a weight of seventy, the weight of the American scale
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amounts to a hundred of which seventy is the United States' own
strength, ten that of Great Britain and the remainder that of the
other actual or prospective allies.
-Morgenthau, 1951:274
Bipolarity
A special case of physical system is a magnet. It is a bipolar system, with two
opposite forces. Its use in international relations goes back at least as far as W.T.R
Fox's The Superpowers (Fox, 1944). Imagining a postwar world, Fox suggests that
"the Western democracies and the Soviet Union will constitute the poles of world
politics," when poles are measured in terms of aggregation of power (Fox, 1944:97).
The entailments of the metaphor are clear in Fox's description of Moscow and
Washington as "the centers around which potentially hostile forces tend to gather."
Understanding the power of metaphor, Fox warns that "the thesis would become
true simply by being believed." (Fox, 1994:100)
During the Cold War, Waltz argued a "bipolar" physical system with two major
opposing forces was naturally more stable than a multipolar system with many
mutually opposing forces. He uses the image of a magnet with two poles as a
special case of a natural bipolar system that was stable.
Waltz viewed the international system as "anarchic" in the sense that it did not
have an external controller. It was therefore crucial to his thinking that forces of
nature be taken advantage of, that a ''natural'' balance of forces be achieved.
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Faux Darwinism and Its Metaphors
''Realism'' in international relations is rife with faux Darwinist metaphors,
in which evolution is seen as survival of the strongest, as in the image of
two animals trying to kill and eat each other. The image, of course, has
very little to do with real natural selection, which is rather a matter of
adaptation to ecological niches. Indeed, one could just as easily
metaphorize evolution as the survival of the best-nurtured (Lakoff and
Johnson, 1999, Chapter 25).
But from a Strict Father perspective on the world, in which competition is
seen not only as natural but as moral, faux Darwinism is going to be
preferred, with competition as natural and survival dependent on strength.
This view is part of the neorealist perspective, and it comes across clearly
in Waltz's writings. The basic form of the metaphor is this:
The logic of preventive war arises from this metaphor. Preventive war has to do
with a state's position in the international system. If state A is increasing its power,
state B might perceive A as a threat to B's position. B might choose to launch a war
against A before A has grown too powerful.
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Source domain: One animal will attack another if it sees it as a threat to
its ecological niche.
Target domain: One state will attack another if it sees it as a threat to
its position in the international system.
"The first concern of states is not to maximize power but to
maintain their positions in the system."
-Waltz, 1979:126
"Great powers [...] fight more wars than lesser states do. Their
involvement in war arises from their position in the international
system, not from their national characteristics. When they are at or
near the top, they fight [...]."
-Waltz, 1979:187
There is a direct link between the Faux Darwinian metaphor and the
Rational Actor model. That link is the commonplace metaphor
Competition Is Predation, in which people are animals. We see this
metaphor is expressions about competition like these:
It's a dog-eat-dog world. It's a jungle out there. If you try that, you'll be
eaten alive.
Combining Faux Darwinism for States with Competition is Predation, we
get the metaphor of the state as a person seeking his self- interest — in
other words a Rational Actor. The result is a state that seeks its "national
interest."
19
Here are some entailments of this mapping:
Source domain: People naturally assume that they must compete to
maximize their self- interest.
Target domain: States naturally assume that they must compete to
maximize their self- interest.
"When faced with the possibility of cooperating for mutual gain,
states that feel insecure must ask how the gain will be divided.
They are compelled to ask not 'Will both of us gain?' but 'Who will
gain more?'"
-Waltz, 1979:105
20
?? A position in the international system is market share.
?? Sovereignty is economic independence.
?? Power is expected returns.
?? Wars are price wars.
This metaphor allows Waltz to reason about how the international system is
managed and who is in charge:
Source domain: Dominating firms in an economic system have more
to say about which games will be played and how.
Target domain: Large states in an international system have more to
say about which games will be played and how.
"In economic systems, any one of the several dominating firms has
more to say about all of the matters that affect it than has one firm
among hundreds of small ones. [...] In international politics [...]
[t]he principle entities that constitute the system are also its
managers. They try to cope with the affairs of each day; they may
also seek to affect the nature and direction of change.
-Waltz, 1979:199
21
The realist emphasis on competition of course fits nicely with the States Are Firms
metaphor, which Waltz uses to account for detente and for the better relations
between the Soviet Union and the United States in the late 1960s:
Source domain: Dominating firms that compete increasingly resemble
each other as competition continues.
Target domain: Large states that compete increasingly resemble each
other as competition continues.
"Theories of oligopolistic competition tell us (that in) important
ways, competitors become like one another as their competition
continues. [...] [T]his applies to states as to firms."
-Waltz, 1979:173
Waltz even forms a conceptual blend of his economic metaphor and his faux
Darwinian metaphor, blending utility- maximization with natural selection,
"according to which features of the environment exterminate those who respond
inappropriately, while rewarding those who respond appropriately." (McKeown,
1983:44)
Interestingly, there is a common analogy between firms and states that Waltz
rejects. It is commonplace in economics to assume that firms primarily seek to
maximize profit, and there is corresponding assumption in neorealist theory that
states primarily seek to maximize power. Waltz rejects both claims. He argues
instead that survival comes before profit maximization. "To maximize profits
tomorrow as well as today, firms first have to survive." (Waltz, 1979, p. 105) This
brings Waltz even closer to a faux Darwinism in which survival is the central
issue. He argues that states, too, primarily seek to guarantee survival before they
can maximize their national interest.
There is, of course, a great more to say about expert metaphors as they have
functioned in foreign policy, but these examples will be sufficient for our
purposes here.
22
4. The Fairy Tale of the Just War
It is always important to have a good story, whether in trying to persuade others
or in thinking things through for yourself. When the question arises as to whether
to go to war, you can't justify your decision, either to others or to yourself,
without a good story. There is a classical narrative form, with two basic versions,
that is used to justify war. Both versions are common fairy tale narratives.
The cast of characters: A villain, a victim and a hero. The victim and the hero may
be the same person. If the victim and hero are the same person, then we have a
self-defense narrative. Otherwise, we have a rescue narrative.
The scenario:
(a) A crime is committed by the villain against an innocent victim (typically an
assault, theft or kidnapping). The offense occurs due to an imbalance of
power and creates a moral imbalance.
(b) The hero either gathers helpers or decides to go it alone.
(c) The hero makes sacrifices; he undergoes difficulties, typically making an
arduous heroic journey, sometimes across the sea to a treacherous terrain.
(d) The villain is inherently evil, perhaps even a monster, and thus reasoning
with him is out of the question. The hero is left with no choice but to engage
the villain in battle.
(e) The hero defeats the villain and rescues the victim — or successfully defends
himself if he was the victim — and saves the community from the threat of
the villain.
(f) The moral balance is restored. Victory is achieved.
(g) The hero, who always acts honorably, has proved his manhood and achieved
glory. The sacrifice was worthwhile. The hero receives acclaim, along with
the gratitude of the victim and the community.
The fairy tale has an asymmetry built into it. The hero is moral and courageous,
while the villain is amoral and vicious. The hero is rational the villain, though he
may be cunning and calculating, cannot be reasoned with. Heroes thus cannot
negotiate with villains; they must defeat them.
The most natural way to justify a war on moral grounds is to fit a given situation
into this fairy tale structure. This is done by metaphorical definition, that is, by
answering the questions: Who is the victim? Who is the villain? Who is the hero?
What is the crime? What counts as victory? Each set of answers to these questions
provides a metaphorical understanding of the situation in terms of the fairy tale.
The metaphorical view of the Enemy as a Demon, who cannot be reasoned with
and must be defeated in battle, arises as an entailment of the metaphor in which a
just war is understood metaphorically in terms of this fairy tale.
23
We are now in a position to see in detail how such metaphors play a systematic
role in foreign policy — not just in persuading the public, though that is quite
important, but in justifying policy within the government itself.
24
5. The Gulf War
Let us begin with the war as viewed by Saddam Hussein. How did the Iraqis see
the invasion of Kuwait?
The war with Iran had virtually bankrupted Iraq. Iraq saw itself as having fought
that war partly for the benefit of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, which had been
threatened by Shiite citizens supporting Khomeini's Islamic Revolution. Kuwait
had agreed to help finance the war, but after the war, the Kuwaitis insisted on
repayment of the “loan.” Kuwaitis had invested hundreds of billions in Europe,
America and Japan, but would not invest in Iraq after the war to help it rebuild.
On the contrary, Kuwait began what amounted to economic warfare against Iraq
by overproducing its oil quota to hold oil prices down.
In addition, Kuwait had drilled laterally into Iraqi territory in the Rumailah oil
field and had extracted oil from Iraqi territory. Kuwait further took advantage of
Iraq by buying its currency, but only at extremely low exchange rates.
Subsequently, wealthy Kuwaitis used that Iraqi currency on trips to Iraq, where
they bought Iraqi goods at bargain rates. Among the things they bought most
flamboyantly were liquor and prostitutes—widows and orphans of men killed in
the war, who, because of the state of the economy, had no other means of support.
All this did not endear Kuwaitis to Iraqis, who were suffering from over 70
percent inflation.
Moreover, Kuwaitis had long been resented by Iraqis and Muslims from other
nations — for good reason. Capital rich, but labor poor, Kuwait imported cheap
labor from other Muslim countries to do its least pleasant work. At the time of the
invasion, there were 400,000 Kuwaiti citizens and 2.2 million foreign laborers
who had been denied rights of citizenry and were being treated by the Kuwaitis as
lesser beings. In short, to the Iraqis and to labor-exporting Arab countries, Kuwait
was anything but an innocent victim.
From the Iraqi perspective, Kuwait owed Iraq dearly — both financially and
morally. From a practical perspective, Iraq needed cash and access to functioning
oil fields — including the parts of the Ramailah fields that Iraq considered in its
territory. Iraq saw those oil fields as its legal property, giving it a right to claim
them. From a moral perspective, Kuwaitis had dishonored Iraq and Iraq was
honor-bound to exact revenge. Moreover, Saddam Hussein had much to gain in
the politics of the Arab world. The division between rich and poor Arabs is a
persistent issue in pan-Arab politics. There the fundamental metaphors are those
of the Arab brotherhood and the Islamic brotherhood, according to which all
Arabs and all Muslims are seen as brothers. According the metaphors, it is the
duty of rich brothers to share their wealth with poor brothers. The rich Arabs —
especially the Kuwaitis and the Saudis, were doing nothing of the sort, which had
created enormous resentme nt throughout the Arab world. Saddam Hussein knew
that an attack on Kuwait therefore was not just pragmatic and justified from the
Iraqi perspective, but that it would be seen by poor Arabs as a heroic move —as
striking a blow on their behalf.
25
In addition to the brotherhood metaphors, there were other metaphors operative in
Iraq as well. By the metaphor of Moral Accounting, a favor incurs a debt and
debts must be paid. Iraq had done a favor for Kuwait, and Kuwait, rather than
paying Iraq back, took advantage of Iraq's financial weakness, harming Iraq
financially and dishonoring it morally. The moral books had to be balanced, and
revenge is the traditional way of the balancing the moral books in Iraqi culture.
Moreover, in questions of dishonor in that culture (Kuwaitis making prostitutes
our of Iraqi war widows, Kuwait siphoning off Iraqi oil, and so on), the issue of
manhood arises. A leader's manhood is brought into question if he does not act in
such a situation.
Before the invasion, Saddam Hussein ran the idea past the American ambassador
and received no negative reaction. He therefore assumed that the Americans, who
had supported him and armed him as an ally against the Iranians, would not
object. He did not count on the metaphor system of the American foreign policy
establishment.
26
A metaphorical death threat naturally evoked the self-defense version of the Fairy
Tale of the Just War. In that version, the United States was both victim and hero.
Iraq was conceptualized, via the Leader-for-Country metonymy and the State-as-
Person metaphor, as being Saddam Hussein. He was the villain in the fairy tale.
As such, he was a monster, an animal, irrational, and beyond reason — a modern
Hitler! As such, he could only understand force, not rational persuasion. At this
point, the story was released that , during the war with Iran, Saddam had used
poison gas against pro-Iranian enclaves in northern Iraq — against his own
people!
President Bush presented this narrative to the American people, but the "No War
For Oil" protesters received the public's support. At the same time he presented
the rescue version of the just war fairy tale and was criticized in the press for not
having a single consistent picture. In early October 1990, a national poll was
taken asking the American people under what conditions they would support a
war. The pollsters reported that Americans would support a rescue. The very next
day, the Bush administrations dropped the self-defense scenario in its public
relations and settled on a rescue scenario, based on the Rape of Kuwait metaphor.
A congressional hearing was called and a young Kuwaiti that that she had seen
rapes of Kuwaiti women by Iraqi soldiers. It turned out later (after the war) that
the young woman was a diplomat's daughter who had been in the United States
the whole time. Nonetheless, the Rape of Kuwait metaphor took hold. That is, in
the rescue fairy tale, the victim was Kuwait and the crime was rape. The United
States was the gallant hero rescuing the innocent victim.
It became clear later that President Bush had never believed the rescue metaphor.
Instead, he believed the self-defense narrative. While running for reelection, he
gave speeches describing his role in the Gulf War and how he defended America
by saving its oil supply from Saddam Hussein.
Going to War
The New York Times, on November 12, 1990, ran a front-page story announcing
that ''a national debate has begun as to whether the United States should go to war
in the Persian Gulf.'' The Times described the debate as defined by what I have
called Clausewitz's metaphor (though it described the metaphor as literal), and
then raised the question, ''What then is the nation's political object in the gulf and
what level of sacrifice is it worth?'' The ''debate'' was not over whether
Clausewitz's metaphor was appropriate, but only over how various analysts
calculated the relative gains and losses using the Rational Actor model. The same
was true of the hearings of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, where
Clausewitz's metaphor provided the framework within which most discussion
took place. Indeed, the hearings began with Colin Powell, then head of the Joint
Chiefs, giving the congressmen a tutorial on Clausewitz and the rational actor
model. Powell himself was against the war, seeing the possible gains as not worth
the costs. He favored trade sanctions instead.
27
Powell set the tone. In the hearings, the Rational Actor model, with its cost-
benefit analysis, took center stage. The possible ''losses'' could only be American
''assets'': money, American casualties, equipment. Iraqi civilian lives came into
the discussion only because there might be a publicity loss. Since Iraqi civilian
were not U.S. ''assets, '' their deaths could not count as ''losses'' or ''costs. ''
George Bush, the American Strict Father president, conceptualized Saddam
Hussein as a recalcitrant child and said that he would "teach him a lesson."
Margaret Thatcher, Bush's British counterpart, keep saying that "Saddam Hussein
must pay" — that is, he must be punished to make up for the moral debt he
incurred with the invasion.
A crucial part in America's evolving strategy was played by the Balance of Power
metaphor. It came out in the congressional hearings that the United States did not
want to depose Saddam Hussein's Sunni Muslim minority as a goal of war, nor
did it want to see Iraq go democratic. The reason was the balance of power within
Iraq. There were three major groups within Iraq: the Shiite Muslims, with 53
percent of the population; the Sunni Muslims (Saddam's community), with 30
percent; and the Kurds, with 17 percent. The Shiites were seen as sympathetic to
Iran. If they gained independence or took control of the country under majority
rule, that would tilt the balance of power toward Iran. The Kurds wanted
independence so that they could join with other Kurds and form a united
Kurdistan, which threatened the territorial integrity of Turkey. It was therefore
important to U.S. policy that Iraq not be split up, and either that the Sunnis kept
control or that a joint government be formed. A strong government was required
to hold the country together. The Sunni political organization, controlled by
Saddam Hussein's family, his army and those personally loyal to him seemed the
only force capable of this.
What about marching into Baghdad and taking control ourselves? Here the
reasoning of the Vietnam analogy entered. We could not "get bogged down" as
we did in Vietnam. There was no way that America could govern Iraq — it was a
full-time job for Saddam Hussein. That would be political suicide for President
Bush, and it would lead to further "instability."
Saddam in Kuwait
Once Saddam Hussein's army had entered Kuwait and the United States had
disapproved, there was no going back for Saddam. Had he capitulated to the
warnings of Bush and Thatcher, he would indeed have looked to his people the
way the West had seen him as — as a child. To be seen as a child would have
been an affront to his manhood. He could not permit that. Newsweek reported that
during the fall of 1990, a saying became popular in Baghdad: "Better to be a cock
for a day than a chicken for a year." Showing one's manhood was uppermost.
What did the threat of a U.S. invasion look like to Saddam Hussein? First, it
would leave him a hero in the Arab world no matter what happened — just for
standing up to the United States. Second, he had to know, from the public
28
congressional hearings, that the United States did not consider the option of
wiping out his army and leaving him without the ability to control the country.
Third, economic sanctions might harm other Iranians, but not Saddam Hussein
personally. Indeed, they would hurt any potential opposition to Saddam more
than they would hurt him.
29
was rescued, the war was a "success", the United States acted heroically, the
villain — Saddam Hussein — was defeated and the war was just.
Moreover, there is one last strange entailment of the Fairy Tale: The war is over.
The Fairy Tale metaphors leave out the fact that, since the official "end" of the
war, an enormous tonnage of bombs continue to be dropped in Iraq — almost
daily.
The war looked very different from Saddam Hussein's perspective. He balanced
the moral books with Kuwait, stealing from the rich Kuwaitis and demeaning
them, creating havoc in their lives and setting their oil wells on fire, costing them
a pretty penny. His revenge was successful and the poor Arabs saw it. He also
successfully stood up to the United States — the invading infidels — thus not
only becoming an Islamic hero and a hero to poor Arabs, but affirming his
masculinity in a legendary way. He continues to run rings around the United
States. In addition, he increased his political hold on Iraq, since the war and the
sanctions have weakened his enemies and allowed him to consolidate his rule. He
has remained in power, while George Bush was defeated electorally and removed
from power not long after the fighting ended.
The moral: Metaphors are not just expressions, like "collateral damage" or
"surgical strike," designed to make war more palatable to the public. Rather they
are ways of reasoning that both determine and constrain our foreign policies and
actions.
30
6. Kosovo
During the early stages of the Kosovo war, there was a certain sense of déjà vu as
the Gulf War metaphors reappeared. President Clinton spoke of "teaching
Milosevic a lesson" — again invoking the metonymy of Leader-for-Nation and
the metaphor of the Country-as-Person, the metaphor of deve loping nations as
children with punitive morality. After a few days of bombing, President Clinton
said he was surprised that Milosevic hadn't given up yet. He said he would make
the bombings "costly" to Milososevic. Here again we see the War as Business and
the Rational Actor metaphors at work. The U.S.cost-benefit model was not the
same as Milosevic's.
As in the Gulf War, we saw in Kosovo the use of the Fairy Tale of the Just War.
Again there was a rescue scenario. Again the villain (Milosevic) became a Hitler
— an irrational person whose appetite for power had to be contained. The
containment metaphor was crucial: If we don’t stop Milsosevic here, he will go on
to Macedonia, Albania, maybe Greece and Turkey. The Balance of Power
metaphor came in to play. President Clinton referred to the Kosovo area as an
earthquake zone where many fault lines converged. The idea was that the region
was unstable, that the use of force was likely and that it would cause considerable
damage. The Kosovo War was seen as a fire that, unless it was put out, could
spread into a regional conflagration.
Again, there was oil in the background — the vast reserves of the Caspian Sea.
The issue of where the main pipelines will go has not been resolved and is ever
present: Who will control the territory through which the pipelines go? Will there
be a pipeline across the Balkans?
As in the Gulf War, the other side had very different metaphors. Under Tito,
Serbia had been carved up to give the Serbs less power. Regions of Serbia went to
Bosnia, Croatia, Macedonia and so on. One of Milosevic’s themes was uniting
"Greater Serbia," regaining territory that Serbs once held and where Serbs lived.
Kosovo was assumed to belong rightfully to Serbia, since its holiest religious
shrines were there. Milosevic brought religion and territorial aspirations together
with the Christian Knight metaphor. Serbs have for centuries seen Kosovo as their
holy territory, invaded and taken over by Muslims, but eventually to be won again
by Serbs. The Christian Knight image invoked the idea that eliminating the
Albanians from Kosovo was a holy crusade to free holy Serb territory — another
form of a just war.
The lessons of the Gulf War were not lost on Milosevic. He knew that, like
Saddam Hussein, he could hide most of his air force and an huge oil supply. He
knew that a NATO attack would just tend to make the Serbs, under attack, rally
around him. He was not afraid of NATO bombing. He knew that, as in the Gulf
War, the bombing would just make his hold on the country stronger
31
What Was Different?
Despite these similarities, there were important differences. George Bush had
refused to intervene in Yugoslavia, saying that it was not in our "national
interest." In the terms of the Nation-as-Person metaphor, there was no threat to
the economic health or military strength of the United States, as there had been in
the Gulf. Moreover, the Bush administration had been very careful to distinguish
between conflicts between nations, as in the Gulf, and conflicts within nations.
This was in accord with the Nation-as-Person metaphor and the Rational Actor
metaphor. In each case, the country was seen as a single individual with no
internal structure.
But during the 1990s, the major conflicts have been within countries — in
Somalia, Bosnia, Rwanda, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Sudan and East Timor — rather
than across national boundaries, with ethnic cleansing and genocide on such a
scale that it could not be ignored. This fact simply does not gibe with the old
metaphors.
It does however fit well with a metaphor that has been gaining prominence since
the 1980s — the Path to Democracy metaphor. The idea behind this metaphor is
the assumption that (1) democracy is the most moral form of government, and (2)
democracies do not go to war against each other. If more and more countries
become democracies, the theory says, then there will be less and less war. This
raises the question of what democracies are and how countries get to be
democracies. There is an enormous body of literature on this, but the basic idea,
accepted in most of the literature, is that there are certain observable properties of
Western democracies: free elections, a free press, civil liberties, an independent
judiciary, civilian control of the military, free markets and thriving institutions of
civil society. Once a country is on the Path to Democracy, it will continue on that
path and eventually become a full- fledged democracy. Thus, even countries that
may currently have dictators should be supported (say, by military aid and World
Bank loans) if they are seen as being "on the path." That, for example, was the
reasoning behind the U.S. support of the Indonesian government, even after the
Cold War. It lies behind support for trade with China, the idea being that more of
a free market economy in China will inevitably lead to greater democracy. And it
lay behind the Dayton Accords, which were designed to move Bosnia toward a
democratic capitalist state, which it is assumed will make it a peaceful state.
Kosovo is seen in the same way.
The Path to Democracy metaphor fits very well with another major metaphorical
adjustment in foreign policy. Previously, the Nation-as-Person metaphor had
defined the national interest as (1) military strength and (2) economic health, in
that order. But since the end of the Cold War, the Clinton administration has
reversed the order, putting economics first. The move to economic globalization
is seen by the Clinton administration as a move toward greater democratization,
and hence, according to theory, toward greater world peace. According to this
policy, the carrot of commerce is seen as replacing the stick of war as much as
possible, and as bringing major economic interests in each country to the side of
peace. In such a view of foreign policy, the primary role for troops is as
32
peacekeeping forces, as we have seen in Haiti, Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo and most
recently in East Timor.
Consequently, the Clinton administration's policy in dealing with Milosevic (up to
the point of bombing) was to minimize the use of force, maximize negotiation and
try to integrate Yugoslavia into the global commercial system, which would set it
on the path to democracy.
33
Here we can see clearly the target of the Kristol-Sagan op-ed piece with which we
began this paper. Their target is an idea — the International Social Norms
metaphor. The argument is a familiar conservative argument, the anti-gun control
argument: Social norms won't protect you; you need guns to protect yourself.
Apply the World Community metaphor and you get: International social norms as
established by treaties and interventions won't protect America; only more
weapons will.
An important aspect of the idea of international social norms concerns poverty.
Just as it is immoral for a community to ignore the plight of the poor, so it is
immoral for a world community to ignore the plight of poor nations. So the
United Nations and the Clinton administration have pushed for debt relief, fo reign
aid and loans. To Kristol, Sagan and other conservatives, this is welfare on an
international scale; it is immoral since it provides something not earned and
therefore encourages moral weakness and dependency. Thus, Kristol and Sagan
identify "global poverty programs" with support for the United Nations —
framing U.N. dues as welfare payments.
President Clinton's idea that the International Social Norms metaphor redefines
the "national interest" is by no means established with the public. Clinton still had
to defend intervention in Kosovo on other grounds. Here is an excerpt from a
speech reported in the New York Times (May 14, 1999:A12).
Bringing the Kosovars home is a moral issue. But it is a very practical, strategic
issue in a world where the future will be threatened by the growth of terrorist
groups, the easy spread of weapons of mass destruction, the use of technology,
including the Internet for people to learn how to make bombs and wreck
countries.
This is also a significant security issue, particularly because of Kosovo's location.
It is just as much a security issue for us as ending the war in Bosnia was. Though
we are working hard with the international community to sustain them, a million
or more permanent Kosovar refugees could destabilize Albania, Macedonia, the
wider region, become a fertile ground for radicalism and vengeance that would
consume southeastern Europe. And if Europe were overwhelmed with that, you
know we would have to then come in and help them.
The old idea of the national interest as the self- interest of the Nation-as-Person is
still very much with us. Even the president, who set the policy of intervention to
defend international norms of state behavior, has to defend it using the old ideas
of a balance of power, a threat to our security, and containment. Despite the
changes, neorealism is still very much with us.
34
Waltz's metaphor, States are Firms, where competition between states is like
competition between firms.
Finally, the neoliberal approach to foreign policy brings with it a system of
metaphors of overwhelming importance:
1. The Market Is a Force of Nature.
Despite the fact the WTO requires hundreds of pages of trade regulations to
maintain the global market, the market is still seen as a natural phenomenon very
much as described by Adam Smith's Invisible Hand metaphor: If everyone seeks
his own profit, then the profit of all will be maximized. As we saw above, the
commonplace metaphor that Well-being is Wealth maps the Invisible Hand
metaphor into the metaphor of Moral Self-Interest, which pays a major role in
conservative thought: If everyone seeks his own well-being then the well-being of
all will be maximized. This is the metaphor that implies that it is immoral to be a
"do-gooder" — to seek the well-being of others — since that will interfere with
the overall maximization of well-being.
The Invisible Hand metaphor and the Moral Self-Interest metaphor together imply
that it is both impractical and immoral to bring non-economic, ethical issues into
the global economic system.
2. Trade Is Democracy.
In this metaphor, free trade is freedom. The achievement of global free trade is the
achievement of global democracy; freedom to sell is freedom to run for office;
and freedom to choose what to buy is freedom to choose who to vote for. A world
with free markets is thus a community with free elections. Taking this metaphor
literally is to identify democratization — the creation of moral states, states that
do not go to war — with free trade.
We can now see that these metaphors relate to each other. Global free trade can be
seen as an international social norm: A moral country does not place high tariffs
on the goods of another country. Free trade corresponds to democracy. And a
world that follows international social norms is a democratic world.
35
7. Implications for the Global Interdependence Initiative
We are now in a position to see why framing, especially metaphorical framing, is
so central to the GII. Consider the task of bringing into American foreign policy
such matters as:
?? environmental concerns
?? human rights
?? women's rights
?? children's health
?? humane labor practices
?? the rights of indigenous cultures to continue to exist
These living concerns run up against two brick walls — the old neorealist policy
(which is very much still in existence) and the new neoliberal one. They are
inconsistent with both metaphor systems.
None of these concerns exist in the neorealist metaphors. Consider the metaphor
that States Are Persons, rationally pursuing their self- interest, namely, military
strength and economic health. Each state is seen as having no internal structure.
Each state is a unit, with only two interests —power and money. In such a picture,
endangered species, rainforests and global warming do not exist. Nor do the rights
or health of any particular individuals or groups. AIDS in Africa is just not in the
picture. These issues are also absent from the Balance of Power metaphor, where
states are physical objects.
They are also out of the picture in the neoliberal metaphors. The view of States as
Firms in economic competition has no place for educating women in Third-World
countries, or preserving bioregionalism, or protecting the rights of indigenous
peoples. When the market is seen as a force of nature, real nature is at best hidden
and at worst destroyed, as if it were a resource to be used or a product to be sold.
If the issues listed above are to play a major role in foreign policy, both of these
sets of metaphors governing how the international system is conceptualized will
have to change. The best hope for this is the extension of the World Community
metaphor to a version of the International Social Norms metaphor. The GII can be
seen as promoting a set of norms. Here's some of the things good countries do.
?? They value their environments; they don't destroy or degrade them.
?? They guarantee human rights and civil liberties.
?? They uphold the rights of women to equal treatment.
?? They take care of their children's health.
?? They make sure workers are treated fairly and humanely.
?? They protect the cultures of indigenous people.
36
Or to put it more generally, good countries are nurturant toward their citizens and
their environment.
From this perspective, the protesters against the WTO in Seattle can be viewed as
supporting such a system of such nurturant norms on a global scale. They were
asserting that such nurturant norms are inconsistent with the WTO's proposed free
trade norms. This need not mean that all forms of the globalization of trade are
hurtful. But those that contradict nurturant norms are. One can, from this
perspective, see the Seattle protesters are saying one thing in unison: Place norms
of care above profit!
What we have is a clash of metaphors, with the metaphor of Nurturant Global
Norms contesting with the Invisible Hand metaphor of neoliberal economics,
which promises maximal prosperity: The profit of all is maximized is everyone is
free to seek his own profit.
Many of the goals of GII appear to fall under the Nurturant Norms metaphor, a
metaphor that seems to appeal more to progressives than to conservatives for
reasons cited above.
Conservatives appear not be able to see these issues as legitimate concerns for
foreign policy. The Man-over-Nature codicil of the Moral Order metaphor views
nature as a resource to be used for human profit. That excludes preserving the
environment as a paramount global value. The Western-over-Nonwestern-Culture
codicil in the Moral Order metaphor sees indigenous cultures as primitive and
inferior, not worth being preserved. The Moral Self-Interest metaphor sees do-
gooders as immoral, and so rules out working for international rights for women
or against child labor laws.
There are, however, a few places where the metaphors of the Strict Morality
system do fit some of these goals. The Christian-over-Non-Christian codicil of
the Moral Order metaphor implies that Christian missionaries should have the
right to convert indigenous people wo rldwide — including in China. This is seen
as a matter of "human rights," and so there is some conservative Christian support
for at least some "human rights" (though it contradicts the rights of idigenous
epople to preserve their culture). There are conservative Christian groups that
conceptualize nature as God's creation, and so, via the God-over-Man codicil of
the Moral Order, see the destruction of the natural world as a sacrilege. Though
that group is not all that widespread, there are possibilities for extending the view.
The conservative concern for preserving American sovereignty and hegemony
can for, some conservatives, lead to support for American labor in its attempt to
institute fair labor practices, like child labor laws, around the world. In all these
cases, there are possibilities for coalitions of strange bedfellows on particular
issues, but not for overall support.
For these reasons, the most receptive audience for GII will be a progressive
audience, though the different types of progressives will view the separate parts of
the GII agenda in different, and largely predictable, ways. This creates a challenge
if the GII is to attract a broad-based constituency for its alternative views.
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Conclusion
It would appear from initial analysis that the International Social Norms
metaphor is an appropriate umbrella for the overall goals of the GII. This
metaphor is still in the process of being established as a legitimate part of foreign
policy. It is strongly contested by conservatives for reasons given above. And the
main trends in foreign policy — neorealism and neoliberal globalization — both
appear to clash with it. In sum, there is a serious job of reframing to be
undertaken before any new model can stand a chance of dethroning the old
models that continue to constrain our imaginations and direct our policies.
Without such attention to the frames we bring to the job, we are likely merely to
substitute new monsters for old.
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References
39
About the Author
George Lakoff is Professor of Linguistics at the University of California at
Berkeley, where he has been since 1972. He was educated at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and Indiana University and previously taught at Harvard
University and the University of Michigan. He is a founder of the Rockridge
Institute and is on the Advisory Board of the FrameWorks Institute.
Professor Lakoff has been a world prominent scholar of linguistics since the mid-
1960s. As a founder of the Generative Semantics movement of the 1960s, he
played one of the most significant roles in integrating mathematical logic into
modern linguistics. In the mid-1970s, with the development of cognitive science,
he was a founder of the Cognitive Linguistics movement, which brought new
insights from the science of mind into linguistics. He also helped develop the
major techniques for studying conceptual sys tems and discovered the mechanisms
governing unconscious metaphorical thought. Since the late 1980s, he has been
working with a group at the University of California at Berkeley on the
development of a neural theory of thought and language, attempting to answer the
question, How can the brain, which is composed of billions of neurons that work
via chemical mechanisms, think using concepts and communicate using
language?
Professor Lakoff has been the one of the most prominent figure in linguistics
applying the study of conceptual systems to other disciplines, including literature,
philosophy, mathematical cognition and especially political and social issues.
During the Cold War, he worked on the analysis of the metaphorical conceptual
system presupposed in International Relations Theory, especially in the work of
Kenneth Waltz on balance of power and in the Rational Actor Model. Also
during that time, he worked on improving US-USSR communications with the
University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation and the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences. He has published a widely read study of the
metaphorical thought used to conceptualize the Gulf War (by both sides). His
1996 book, Moral Politics, was the first full-scale application of cognitive science
to the study of the conceptual systems of liberals and conservatives in the United
States.
Professor Lakoff is a member of the Science Board of the Santa Fe Institute, a
past member of the Governing Board of the Cognitive Science Society, and past
president of the International Cognitive Linguistics Association.
His books include Metaphors We Live By (with Mark Johnson); Women, Fire and
Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal About the Mind; More than Cool
Reason: A Field Guide to Poetic Metaphor (with Mark Turner); Moral Politics;
Philosophy in the Flesh: How Cognitive Science Challenges the Western
Philosophical Tradition (with Mark Johnson); and the just-completed Where
Mathematics Comes From: How the Embodied Mind Creates Mathematics (with
Rafael Núñez).
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