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In this interlude, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey continues the Language Arc by examining one of the most consequential ideas in cognitive science, philosophy, and anthropology: language does not merely describe reality. It actively participates in shaping it.
Drawing from research in linguistics, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, this episode explores how grammatical structure, metaphor, and symbolic framing influence perception, memory, emotion, and moral judgment. From the way tense alters our experience of time, to how metaphor organizes political and personal belief, language emerges as an invisible architecture through which consciousness moves.
Listeners are guided through key ideas from cognitive linguistics, including how conceptual metaphors scaffold abstract thought, how linguistic categories influence attention and recall, and how habitual speech patterns quietly constrain or expand what we recognize as possible. The episode also touches on clinical and contemplative implications, including how reframing inner language can alter emotional regulation, identity formation, and decision-making.
Rather than treating language as a neutral tool, this interlude invites a deeper recognition of speech as an active force that shapes inner life and collective reality alike. Words do not simply name the world. They help build it.
Interlude XXIX is part of a larger philosophical sequence investigating how language modifies consciousness, following earlier explorations of perception, inner speech, and narrative selfhood.
To share reflections or questions, email [email protected] or text 3366755836.
By Dr. Juan Carlos Rey5
99 ratings
In this interlude, Dr. Juan Carlos Rey continues the Language Arc by examining one of the most consequential ideas in cognitive science, philosophy, and anthropology: language does not merely describe reality. It actively participates in shaping it.
Drawing from research in linguistics, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, this episode explores how grammatical structure, metaphor, and symbolic framing influence perception, memory, emotion, and moral judgment. From the way tense alters our experience of time, to how metaphor organizes political and personal belief, language emerges as an invisible architecture through which consciousness moves.
Listeners are guided through key ideas from cognitive linguistics, including how conceptual metaphors scaffold abstract thought, how linguistic categories influence attention and recall, and how habitual speech patterns quietly constrain or expand what we recognize as possible. The episode also touches on clinical and contemplative implications, including how reframing inner language can alter emotional regulation, identity formation, and decision-making.
Rather than treating language as a neutral tool, this interlude invites a deeper recognition of speech as an active force that shapes inner life and collective reality alike. Words do not simply name the world. They help build it.
Interlude XXIX is part of a larger philosophical sequence investigating how language modifies consciousness, following earlier explorations of perception, inner speech, and narrative selfhood.
To share reflections or questions, email [email protected] or text 3366755836.

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