articlePsychological ScienceMar 1, 2002Closed access

The Roles of Body and Mind in Abstract Thought

Institute of Cognitive and Brain Sciences · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +1 more institution

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Abstract

How are people able to think about things they have never seen or touched? We demonstrate that abstract knowledge can be built analogically from more experience-based knowledge. People's understanding of the abstract domain of time, for example, is so intimately dependent on the more experience-based domain of space that when people make an air journey or wait in a lunch line, they also unwittingly (and dramatically) change their thinking about time. Further, our results suggest that it is not sensorimotor spatial experience per se that influences people's thinking about time, but rather people's representations of and thinking about their spatial experience.

Citation impact

880
total citations
FWCI
15.04
Percentile
100%
References
15
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Domain (mathematical analysis)
  • Space (punctuation)
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Epistemology
  • Social psychology
  • Cognitive science
  • Linguistics
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