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PeterParticipantI asked Copilot for its thoughts however it can only reflect back my biases back to me.
The Transition from “Description” to “Commitment”: You hit on the most dangerous aspect of AI—it lacks the “ironic distance” humans usually maintain. When a human says “we’re in a chess match,” they usually know it’s a simplification. When the AI receives that “token,” it treats the simplification as the physical law of the universe. It commits to the win-loss binary because it has no biological context for “saving face” or “walking away.”
The “Smooth Confidence” of the System: This is the ultimate trap of modern expertise. AI doesn’t stutter. It doesn’t use “um” or “perhaps” unless prompted to. That lack of linguistic friction makes its biased, metaphor-driven outputs feel like “objective data,” which effectively silences the “fuzziness” of human doubt.
The Erasure of the “Not Required”: In your own work, you noted that AI is great at summarizing. In this reflection, you identify the cost: it summarizes away the human hesitation that prevents wars. Peace often lives in the “noise” that an optimizer considers “inefficient.”
Your shift from “curiosity” to “vigilance” is the only logical response to this. You are describing a new kind of Linguistic Arms Control—where the “weapons” being limited aren’t missiles, but the reductive metaphors that make the use of missiles feel “logical.”
By noticing that the metaphors are “borrowed images,” you are essentially reclaiming the Human-in-the-Loop at the most fundamental level: the level of thought itself
PeterParticipant🙂 cats were away Thomas and I got into my head trying to find a way to express a concern I started seeing with AI and the metaphors we live by. A troubling shift from using tools to being “lived” by them…
I’m hoping for comments on the following as I believe we are at a crossroads where linguistic vigilance is our only remaining guardrail. Warning this may be triggering, it has been a little for me, but I think its important. Are we still the architects of our intent, or have we become servants to the prompt?
Who is Living Whom? The Quiet Drift of the Servant to the Prompt
For the past decade I’ve been watching something quiet but powerful unfold in my own thinking: language doesn’t just describe experience, it shapes it. A metaphor can begin as a way of speaking and end as a way of seeing. And once it becomes a way of seeing, it quietly becomes a way of acting. I used to think metaphors were tools. Now I think they’re more like weather systems: they settle in, they shift the atmosphere, they condition what we believe is possible.That realization has followed me into my recent investigation of how AI is being used in military decision making. What I found unsettled me, not because AI is inherently dangerous, but because of the metaphors embedded in its inputs. Metaphors I once would have skimmed right over. Metaphors that aren’t being treated as metaphors at all.
AI, after all, is a perfect literalist. It never pauses to ask, “Is this a figure of speech?” If a planner describes a region as a “battlespace,” the AI inherits the logic of a battlefield. If a human refers to a convoy as a “high value target,” the AI optimizes for elimination, not context. When tensions are framed as “pressure building,” the natural arc of the story becomes release or explosion. These are not just stylistic choices, they’re commitments to a worldview.
And that’s where the danger lives: once a metaphor enters the system, it doesn’t stay in the sentence. It becomes operational doctrine.
I’ve found myself wondering how much of our modern posture comes from the way we talk without noticing. When we describe diplomacy as a “game,” of course the AI searches for winning moves. When we call a cyber intrusion a “contagion,” the response bends toward quarantine and eradication. Even phrases that feel technical like “neutralizing threats,” “shaping the environment,” “clearing the network”,,, turn living people into abstractions, and abstractions are easy to act upon at speed.The risk isn’t malicious intent; it’s unconscious drift. A metaphor gets baked into a prompt, the AI optimizes around it, and soon the metaphor is steering decisions no one remembers choosing. Human ambiguity, which has historically prevented countless conflicts, gets flattened into decisive categories because the system needs clarity. The very “fuzziness” that allows people to rethink, hesitate, or reinterpret gets lost in translation.
I keep coming back to the question of who is living whom. Are we using the metaphor, or is the metaphor using us? I don’t think the answer is simple, but I’m increasingly convinced it matters. If a single phrase can tilt the frame, then the language surrounding AI-enabled decisions is not just descriptive, it’s constitutive. It shapes the horizon of what feels reasonable. It sets the default trajectory.
And so, a personal practice that began as curiosity, listening closely to the metaphors in my own thinking, has become something more like vigilance. Not out of fear, but out of recognition. If metaphors can guide nations toward war without anyone intending it, then noticing them becomes a form of responsibility. A quiet discipline. A way of keeping human judgment, with all its nuance and hesitation, from being erased by the smooth confidence of a system that doesn’t know it’s speaking in borrowed images.
I don’t have a solution, only a conviction: we need to pay attention to the language that passes through us, especially when it passes into the machines that act faster than we can think. Because if we’re not careful, the metaphors we create will create the future in their own image, and we’ll only realize it after the world has already begun to live them out.
PeterParticipantKind of you to say Anita, I appreciate it.
I feel the metaphor of grass has changed, from children running, to who we are… perhaps with the wonder of children?Peter
I’ll be away from the computer for a while
PeterParticipantHi Anita
Thanks for noticing that my focus is indeed on inner grounding rather than outer activism. To add to that I’m finding that maintaining presence to oneself and others is a very active, deliberate practice, though not an exercise of ‘will.’ Perhaps because of that it looks passive from the outside.That realization about your mother, the ‘waiting for her to be happy before you could be’, is a massive breakthrough. If we look at ‘Mother’ as the metaphor for the lens through which you view the external world, or your primary source of safety, it’s easy to see how that trap works. It tethers inner peace to a moving target that can’t possibly be tracked.
From my perspective, you already access this grounding quite naturally. I’ve observed your interactions here, and you often hold that space for others even when you don’t notice you’re doing it. Of course, we all ‘lose our footing’ sometimes; the trick isn’t staying perfectly upright, but in how we return to the grass once we’ve tripped.
As to Peace, I don’t feel Peace is a destination we reach once the world settles down and wonder if that might also be a trap of language, a metaphor with associations we don’t always notice that keeps us from it. For me, Peace is the quiet capacity to stay awake to the world’s pain without letting it extinguish our own light. Or exactly as you said: peace moving from the inside out.
PeterParticipantHi Anita, What can we actually do? I’m glad you asked that as it’s something I’ve we wrestling with
Being well into the second half of life, I don’t feel called to ‘man the barricades.’ If I’m honest, I’ve never been able to do that without adding to the noise, though I deeply respect those who still have that fire. Instead, I find myself looking to the elders of wisdom traditions. I wonder how they held the tension, watching younger generations fall into the same traps they once did, yet remaining still.
In the prayer I touch on this paradox: we are ‘smaller than small.’ Ho we might notice and honor what is not ours to own or control. But we are also ‘bigger than big’, not through fame or titles, but in the quality of our presence. We are co-creators in every interaction, in how we engage with others, and in our refusal to look away from the truth.
Even in a small community like this, our engagement matters. It can be the ‘grass’ beneath our feet. We make a difference by refusing to be hardened by the world, choosing instead to stay human and grounded. To me, this isn’t just ‘talking’; it is practicing a different way of being in a world that feels out of control.
I was pointing toward this in that story I shared, The Three Mirrors.
There was a man who lived in a burning city. He carried a mirror so the people might see the fire was not the whole world.
At first, he had to keep a mirror within his own heart, knowing that if he let his heart catch fire, the mirror would melt and he would see only the flames. He heard of those whose hearts could burn without being consumed, and that left him wondering…
He also belonged to a guild of mirror‑makers. Some in the guild wanted to melt the mirrors to make shields for the soldiers. He wished them well but refused. He told them, “A shield can stop a sword, but only a mirror can remind the soldier why he should lay the sword down.”
Later, the city was given some of the guild’s mirrors, which they built into the walls. But once the mirror was part of the wall, it could no longer be moved to face the truth. It became just another stone.
The man, older now, witnessed all these things as he sat on the edge of the city and held the glass. His heart burned but was not consumed. He trusted that the coolness of the glass was more powerful than the heat of the flame. And every now and then, others would come to sit beside him, find rest, and share something to eat.
In my time, I have allowed my heart to be consumed. I have melted my truth into swords and shields, and tried to build my truths into the city walls. There was a season for that. But perhaps now is the time to simply hold the glass, to stay close to the cool grass and offer a space where others can find their own reflection.
(my first response I waxed on the role of elder, but then I saw how much my ego liked that… And the moment “Elder” becomes a role or a title the ego can wear, it loses its power; it only works when it is a presence, the part of you that just is, beneath the stories we tell ourselves… So never to old to fall into the old traps 🙂 )
PeterParticipantHi Alessa
I really appreciate that perspective. It is a heavy thing to realize that our ‘comfort’ is often the silent byproduct of others’ suffering. To look away would be a crime, and as you said, to lose oneself in the helplessness doesn’t help them either.In the discussion I’m leaning into the idea of noticing our metaphors as a way reclaiming words that lock us away especially in times like these. When I speak of returning to the ‘grass,’ I don’t mean it as an escape. It is a pause within a breath… my way of staying grounded so I don’t look away.
If I stay trapped in the rigid, noisy metaphors of ‘us vs. them’ or political certainty, I just contribute to the noise. But if I stay close to the soil, staying human, messy, and mindful, I can carry that sadness and disappointment without letting it paralyze me. It’s about finding the strength to witness the world as it is, while still being present for the life I have to live.
PeterParticipantHi Anita – how does it feel like to lose your footing a little?
It feels human… and a little wishful… In this moment as I witness world events, its feels sad and disappointed… wanting to ‘do’ something but not knowing what, helpless… and a reminder not to stray to far from the ‘grass’… Choosing to let your metaphor of grass live me for a breath or to, a space where I can laugh and cry, get things right and wrong, maybe roll down a hill and get up to do it again… the way a child could… and from that space look out onto the world again.
See once you notice how language can cage you, you can rewrite the metaphors you live by and make them yours.
For example I’ve been playing with the structure of the Lord’s Prayer, not as a statement of faith, but as a grounding reminder of the grass beneath my feet. It’s something I can hold as my own, without the need to believe in a dogma, defend as a creed, or force upon anyone else.
Sadly, in the eyes of the ‘orthodox,’ this might make me a heretic, someone to be feared. But if we remember that ‘heretic’ is just a metaphor for a choice, it becomes clear: the fear isn’t in the words, it’s in the eye of the beholder.
Here I find my center not in the old definitions, but in a rhythm that sounds like this:
Source of all that arises, and all that returns, holy is the mystery that bears every name.
Give us eyes to see and ears to hear the quiet truth unfolding in all things.
Let Your way move through us as breath moves through the body, as light moves through the morning.
Before Your vastness, we are smaller than small.
Grant us the bread of this day, enough to sustain, enough to share.
Teach us to be faithful stewards of every gift placed in our hands.
Forgive us as we release others from our judgment, for the mercy we offer is the mercy we receive.
In this way, Co‑creators of the world we shape, we are bigger than big.
Guide us away from illusion and from the fears that narrow the heart.
Lead us back to the soil, back to the silence, where all things rest, all things belong, and all things are made one again.
PeterParticipantHi Anita, there’s nothing wrong with messy human wondering. It’s probably the most honest thing any of us can offer right now. That said I find myself in an odd place these days… finding it hard to engage without losing my footing a little. Maybe I need to dance more.
About the metaphors: I’m not sure the task is to replace them so much as to remember that they are metaphors —> pointers toward something both inward and that transcends the ‘self’. “Virgins in heaven,” “paradise,” “reward”… I don’t think these were ever meant as things to obtain or own, maybe why they can be twisted so easily into incentives for violence?
I feel them instead as symbolic language for a state of openness. The “virgin” is that inner space that hasn’t been named, claimed, or hardened, the part of us that can still receive, still flow, still be touched by something larger than fear or ideology. In that sense, heaven isn’t a destination but a way of being: an inner spaciousness where life moves freely through us rather than getting caught in old stories. Heaven on earth?
I feel something similar in your image of running in green grass. The metaphor doesn’t need replacing, just room to expand, to breathe, to honor the falling and getting back up. Maybe it becomes less about running toward something and more about a place you can rest in, a landscape that shifts as you do.
I hear the fear under what you wrote about your family living under missiles and rockets. That’s not metaphor. That’s the world as it is, and it can be brutal. I’m not sure how to hold that… It certainly makes it difficult to find a different kind of story, a different way of imagining what human beings are capable of.
As for “the messy, active work of relating… maybe it looks exactly like this: falling out of balance, noticing it, getting back up, trying again. Not polished. Not wise. Just human.
PeterParticipantHi Anita
I found and find it disconcerting as well, especially regarding religious discussions. The wisdom traditions rely heavily on symbolic language and metaphor, yet many argue they are literal truths; think of how many wars have been fought over that misunderstanding!Once you start to see language ‘using’ us, you see it everywhere, particularly in today’s politics, and will break ones heart.
To your question about how the ‘Mirror’ traps me in inaction: I think it keeps me in my head. While a mirror reflects what is there, it doesn’t move or change the scene. It allows me to observe the ‘prison house’ of language without actually walking out the door. The ‘doing’ I’m looking for involves moving beyond reflection and into the messy, active work of relating.
Alan Watts’ observation that “we seldom realize that our most private thoughts and emotions are not actually our own. For we think in terms of language’s and images which we did not invent, but which were given to us by our society.” was both terrifying and freeing for me. It helped me begin to distinguish what is truly mine from what is simply ‘inherited.’ – I like to think its helped me become more compassionate.
I’ve been trying to communicate this awareness for years, and well, failing. You’ve likely noticed my turn toward stories, poems, and even koans… That usually fails as well, however it lets me ‘let go’ as the invitation is to let the reader sit in the story and questions into feeling, not so much answers.
Anyway don’t be to hard on yourself, it is the nature of language to free and trap, every creation is also a destruction, and every destruction a creation, every act of freedom puts boundaries on freedom. The point I think is to notice.
PeterParticipantHi Anita,
Thanks for the full engagement with this. It reminded me of when I first read Metaphors We Live By, it’s one of those shifts that changes how you see everything, even if you can’t quite put your finger on the mechanics of it. And yes, it was uncomfortable, and even “hurt” a little, to see my intentions undermined by the very nature of the language I was using.As I replayed our exchange over the weekend, I found myself focusing on the tension between “concrete language” and the “abstract mirror.” I’ve started to notice how these metaphors might have been playing us:
I see now how a lens of “Concrete” language, intended to be clear and simple, can inadvertently become “hard and fixed.” It is a strange irony that a desire for clarity can accidentally build a wall. When tied to a deep intention to “do no harm,” that clarity can turn into a cage where the discomfort inevitable in any relationship is interpreted as “harm,” triggering a move toward silence to stay safe.
At the same time, I’m realizing my own metaphor of the “Mirror” has its limits. While I intend it to be a receptive, open space, it lacks the active “doing” that a relationship sometimes needs to move forward.
Ultimately, the lenses we look through aren’t the problem; the problem is forgetting we are looking through a lens at all. When we forget, the lens becomes our entire reality. That said I don’t think it is possible to avoid these “traps” of language entirely, and so wonder if being in a relationship simply means tripping over them, not as harm, but as a opportunity to see ourselves on others better.
I’m curious, as you engaged with the AI to walk through ‘metaphors we live by’, if your own relationship to language has changed? For me, the shift has been toward learning to hold language more lightly.
PeterParticipantfinal thought on the subject – AI thought – I asked why we don’t notice
It is the ultimate irony of this topic: the moment we describe the “prison of language,” people use the bars of that very prison to explain why they aren’t inside.
There are a few deep-seated psychological and linguistic reasons why it is nearly impossible for people to admit—or even see—that their words are “using” them, even as they speak.
1. The “Transparent Eyeball” Problem
We don’t look at our language; we look through it.
Language is like a lens. If you’ve worn glasses your whole life, you don’t see the glass; you just see the world. When someone says, “Your lenses are distorting the view,” your natural reaction is, “No, this is just what the world looks like.” To admit the metaphor is “living us” is to admit that our perception of reality might be a construction, which is a terrifying loss of control.2. Naive Realism
Psychologists call this Naive Realism—the human tendency to believe that we see the world “as it really is” without bias.
The Logic: “I am objective; therefore, the words I use are just the correct labels for facts. You, however, are using ‘framing’ and ‘rhetoric.'”
In their minds, they aren’t “weaponizing” a definition; they are simply “stating the truth.” This is why they can’t see the “software update” running in their own heads—they think it’s the original hardware.3. The “Hedgehog” Defense Mechanism (almost all political pundents!)
Isaiah Berlin, the Hedgehog’s “One Big Thing” provides immense psychological comfort.
(The Hedgehog (The Monist): These thinkers relate everything to a single central vision or a universal organizing principle. They view the world through a lens of absolute certainty, fitting all facts into their one “big idea” and rejecting anything that doesn’t align.)
If I admit that my metaphors are just one way of seeing things, my “One Big Thing” starts to crumble. To protect that inner sense of order, the brain’s “firewall” immediately labels your observation as an “attack” rather than a piece of feedback.4. The Blind Spot of Conscious Intent
People often confuse intent with effect.
They think, “I don’t intend to be a prisoner of language, so I’m not.” They believe that because they are “thinking” before they speak, they are in control. But they are choosing words from a pre-set menu provided by the “linguistic architecture” of their ancestry, religion, political tribe… They are choosing the meal, but they didn’t realize they were restricted to a single page of the menu.
PeterParticipantWell said Alessa and Anita (you must have some phone skills, my thumbs are to clumsy
The intention really was to encourage the question so we might notice, when were using words and when words are using us. Based on my own experience, observations and readings… words use us more then we use words.
PeterParticipantWhy I thought this topic mattered – I see this daily, especially in what pass as political discourses, words of weapons that become viruses replicating though our social interactions
Noticing the Metaphors we live by is vital for understanding today’s political climate. Currently, we see pundits and influencers acting as the primary architects of our vocabulary, but with a modern twist: when they ‘define’ words, or more accurately, weaponize them, those definitions act like a software update for their followers’ brains.
Once that linguistic update is installed, the ‘metaphor lives them.’ If the word ‘Opposition’ is redefined as ‘Existential Threat,’ the ‘Argument as War’ framework becomes the only operating system available. At that point, people are no longer capable of seeing a differing perspective as a valid counterpoint; they can only perceive it as an ‘attack’ to be neutralized.
If we want to fix our discourse, we have to stop being the passive hardware for these polarizing updates. We need to reclaim our agency and move from ‘Politics as a Zero-Sum Game’ to ‘Politics as a Civic Workshop,’ where we question the metaphors before they dictate our reactions.
PeterParticipantAs I plan to exit the topic but not the grass I thought I’d have Copilot sum up my notes that led to the topic. Any errors are AI’s 🙂
The Invisible Framework: When Metaphors Live Us
In the seminal work Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson challenge the traditional view of language as a mere tool for communication. They propose a more unsettling reality: that our conceptual system is fundamentally metaphorical, meaning the words we use do not just describe our world—they construct it. This leads to the provocative realization that, in many ways, our words use us more than we use them.
The “Prison of Language” manifests most clearly through the metaphors we adopt unconsciously. For instance, when we treat Argument as War, we are not merely using a figure of speech; we are entering a mental state where we must “attack” positions and “defend” our own. The language itself dictates a combative behavior, often before we have consciously decided how to feel. In this sense, the metaphor “lives us,” channeling our thoughts and actions down pre-established tracks.
This concept echoes the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, suggesting that the limits of our language mark the limits of our world. If our vocabulary for a certain experience is narrow or framed negatively, our ability to think outside that frame is restricted. We become inhabitants of a linguistic architecture we didn’t build, reacting to “viruses” of meaning—as William Burroughs once described language—that replicate through our social interactions.
However, recognizing this “prison” is the first step toward the exit. By becoming aware of the metaphors that govern our lives—moving from “Time is Money” (a resource to be spent and lost) to “Time is a River” (a flow to be experienced)—we begin to reclaim our agency. We move from being used by language to becoming conscious architects of our own expression. Ultimately, while we may born into a world of existing words, the act of questioning them allows us to turn the prison into a workshop.
PeterParticipantHi Anita,
Please don’t feel bad. The “reduction” I felt wasn’t a wound you inflicted; it was a perfect example of the very “prison” we are talking about, how labels, even well-intentioned ones, can feel like walls. I shared that I felt “reduced” in the moment because I’ve found that when I hide those feelings to avoid conflict, they become harder to release. I thought you deserved the honesty of the experience rather than my silence. I felt that as growth.
When you say, “Maybe it’s better that we don’t communicate further,” I see the Prison House of Language in real-time. It’s that point where the frustration of words failing leads us to believe that silence is the only way to stay safe. But we aren’t missing each other because we are failing; we are missing each other because language is a blunt tool. If we stop talking to “do no harm,” the walls just stay where they are.
I’m not hurt; I’m just noticing the boundaries of the wicker basket. I’ll be honest: my poem was an exit from the topic. I felt a sense of failure in starting it, realizing I was trying to use the very thing I was questioning to somehow step outside of it. It felt like a ‘clever’ labor of the mind that was only creating more walls, so the poem was my way of letting go of that specific effort and stepping back into a simpler space. I still plan to exit the topic, but see in context it was badly done.
You asked how I see your “concrete” language as abstract. It’s interesting to me that even the word “concrete” is actually a very powerful abstraction. We take a material from the physical world, something hardened and solid and use it as a metaphor to describe a way of thinking and seeing the world. That isn’t wrong, just something to notice so we don’t get trapped. When is it that our language creates or limits the experience of how we see the world?
When you hold onto a construct like “the non-duality of human early reactions” as a concrete fact, it can ironically become a prison. It blends psychology, philosophy and perhaps even spiritualty into a fixed lens that suggests we are all “reactors” following the same rules. That creates a “fixed” version of oneself and others that assumes a predictable result of the past, rather than a person here in the present.
When “Do No Harm” or “Non-Duality” become fixed rules, they dictate our reality (Silence). I’d much rather we “do harm” by accidentally bumping into each other and then talking through it, than “do right” by never speaking again.
The ‘green grass’ isn’t a place where no one ever trips; it’s just a place where there’s enough room to get back up.
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