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Truth in Metaphor: an Exploration into Indian Aesthetics

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Abstract

Meaning in literary texts such as poetry and novel etc., is not determined on the basis of a literal understanding of the words in it, but through a total evaluation of the devices such as metaphors and similes. This paper deals with metaphor to show its significance, to make us aware that metaphoric expressions do give a different kind of knowledge, and to pave the way to disclose a different kind of truth which is perhaps, more valuable than what the literal sense provides. Ordinarily metaphorical use is taken for rhetorical purposes. Literalists of the Western and Indian philosophical traditions believe that it is only the literal or primary meaning that can give us a precise account of language. Metaphors are viewed by them as fuzzy, lies, not corresponding to actual states of affairs, non-propositional in character, not having truth-conditions, and thus not providing us with any knowledge or truth. However, this paper tries to work out the fundamentality of metaphor, how metaphor widens our experience of the world, and how it has the power to take us to an alternative world to introduce with some new truth by exploring certain notions of the Indian aestheticians.

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Acknowledgements

I wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers for Sophia who provided helpful comments on my paper and a special gratitude to Professor Purushottama Bilimoria for editing and inspiring me.

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Correspondence to Arundhati Mukherji.

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Mukherji, A. Truth in Metaphor: an Exploration into Indian Aesthetics. SOPHIA (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11841-023-00995-8

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