Friday, March 20, 2020
How The Ethical Theory Or Ethical Principles Might Be Applies To
How The Ethical Theory Or Ethical Principles Might Be Applies To How The Ethical Theory Or Ethical Principles Might Be Applies To Euthanasia ââ¬â Term Paper Example Assisted Suicide Assisted Suicide In the case of assisted suicide of Terri Schiavo a 41 year old female who was severally ill and was on the verge of experiencing death was removed from her artificial life support of a feeding tube (YouTube, 2014). The person who took the final decision of removing the tube was her husband who was even held responsible for hurting her due to which Terri was experiencing deadly health conditions. She ultimately died 12 days after she was removed from her life support and she was administered with high dosage of morphine which was induced to relieve her from her sufferings. Since then, till date the debate of whether her husbandââ¬â¢s decision of removing her from life support was an ethical one or not has been taking place. Taking into consideration the ethical theory of Kant for ethical decision making it would not be wrong to suggest that the decision of removing Terri from life support is completely ethical in nature. Kant states that the decisi on makerââ¬â¢s reason for making a decision should be that he she is ready to accept the same decision in similar or any other situation (Cooper, 2000). The husband states that it was Terriââ¬â¢s will that she did not want to live on life support and the reason was backed by her brother and her brotherââ¬â¢s wife. If the husband made the decision of removing Terri from life support on the basis of the reason that if a similar or another situation takes place in which he is removed from life support and if he had a will of not living on life support then his decision is an ethical one.References"The Terri Schiavo Story."à YouTube. YouTube, n.d. Web. 18 Aug. 2014. .Cooper, T. (2000).à Handbook of Administrative Ethics. 1st ed. Boca Raton: C R C Press LLC.
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Dead Metaphor Definition and Examples
Dead Metaphor Definition and Examples A dead metaphor is traditionally defined as aà figure of speech that has lost its force and imaginative effectiveness through frequent use. Also known as aà frozen metaphor or a historical metaphor. Contrast with creative metaphor. Over the past several decades, cognitive linguists have criticized the dead metaphor theory- the view that a conventional metaphor is dead and no longer influences thought: The mistake derives from a basic confusion: it assumes that those things in our cognition that are most alive and most active are those that are conscious. On the contrary, those that are most alive and most deeply entrenched, efficient, and powerful are those that are so automatic as to be unconscious and effortless. (G. Lakoff and M. Turner, Philosophy in the Flesh. Basic Books, 1989) Asà I.A. Richards said back in 1936: This favorite old distinction between dead and living metaphors (itself a two-fold metaphor) needs a drastic re-examination (The Philosophy of Rhetoric) Examples and Observations Kansas City is oven hot, dead metaphor or no dead metaphor. (Zadie Smith, On the Road: American Writers and Their Hair, July 2001)An example of a dead metaphor would be the body of an essay. In this example, body was initially an expression that drew on the metaphorical image of human anatomy applied to the subject matter in question. As a dead metaphor, body of an essay literally means the main part of an essay, and no longer suggests anything new that might be suggested by an anatomical referent. In that sense, body of an essay is no longer a metaphor, but merely a literal statement of fact, or a dead metaphor. (Michael P. Marks, The Prison as Metaphor. Peter Lang, 2004)Many venerable metaphors have been literalized into everyday items of language: a clock has a face (unlike human or animal face), and on that face are hands (unlike biological hands); only in terms of clocks can hands be located on a face. . . . The deadness of a metaphor and its status as a clichà © are relative m atters. Hearing for the first time that life is no bed of roses, someone might be swept away by its aptness and vigor. (Tom McArthur, Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press, 1992) [A] so-called dead metaphor is not a metaphor at all, but merely an expression that no longer has a pregnant metaphorical use. (Max Black, More About Metaphor. Metaphor and Thought, 2nd ed., ed. by Andrew Ortony. Cambridge University Press, 1993) It's Alive! The dead metaphor account misses an important point: namely, that what is deeply entrenched, hardly noticed, and thus effortlessly used is most active in our thought. The metaphors . . . may be highly conventional and effortlessly used, but this does not mean that they have lost their vigor in thought and that they are dead. On the contrary, they are alive in the most important sense- they govern our thought- they are metaphors we live by. (Zoltn Kà ¶vecses, Metaphor: A Practical Introduction. Oxford University Press, 2002) Two Kinds of Death The expression dead metaphor- itself metaphorical- can be understood in at least two ways. On the one hand, a dead metaphor may be like a dead issue or a dead parrot; dead issues are not issues, dead parrots, as we all know, are not parrots. On this construal, a dead metaphor is simply not a metaphor. On the other hand, a dead metaphor may be more like a dead key on a piano; dead keys are still keys, albeit weak or dull, and so perhaps a dead metaphor, even if it lacks vivacity, is metaphor nonetheless. (Samuel Guttenplan, Objects of Metaphor. Oxford University Press, 2005) The Etymological Fallacy To suggest that words always carry with them something of what may have been an original metaphoric sense is not only a form of etymological fallacy; it is a remnant of that proper meaning superstition which I.A. Richards so effectively critiques. Because a term is used which was originally metaphorical, that is, which came from one domain of experience to define another, one cannot conclude that it necessarily continues to bring with it the associations which it had in that other domain. If it is a truly dead metaphor, it will not. (Gregory W. Dawes, The Body in Question: Metaphor and Meaning in the Interpretation of Ephesians 5:21-33. Brill, 1998)
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