Tuesday, 30 June 2026

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.7 Does Physics Still Need Force?

At the beginning of this series, force appeared to be one of the most familiar concepts in physics. By the end, it has become one of the most intriguing.

We began with a simple observation.

Force seems obvious.

Things move because something makes them move.

The intuition is deeply rooted in ordinary experience.

It scarcely appears to require explanation.


Yet as we followed the changing metaphors through which physics has imagined force, that initial simplicity gradually gave way to something more subtle.

The imagination did not remain fixed.

It repeatedly reorganised itself.

Each metaphor opened new possibilities for physical thought.

Each quietly relocated the explanatory centre.


Force first appeared as push.

Agency belonged to the body that acted.

Explanation began with intervention.


Then force became pull.

Agency extended beyond immediate contact.

Influence could be imagined across separation.

The physical imagination had already begun to loosen its dependence upon direct encounter.


Next came interaction.

Agency no longer belonged exclusively to either participant.

Attention shifted towards the relation established between them.

Explanation became increasingly relational.


The metaphor of exchange carried the movement further.

The relation itself became intelligible through organised transmission.

Attention turned towards what passed between the participants.

The explanatory centre shifted once again.


With field, another transformation occurred.

The surrounding physical situation itself acquired explanatory significance.

The environment ceased to be merely the setting for physical events.

Its organisation became part of their explanation.


Finally, the metaphor of curvature introduced perhaps the most surprising possibility of all.

Motion no longer required force to occupy the centre of explanation.

Geometry itself assumed work that earlier metaphors had assigned to agency.

The imagination had travelled a remarkable distance.


Taken together, these transformations suggest something worth noticing.

The word force remained.

Its conceptual work did not.

Across successive metaphors, the explanatory burden gradually migrated.

What once belonged to acting bodies came to belong, in turn, to relations, transmissions, organised situations, and geometry.

The concept remained recognisable.

Its role quietly changed.


This observation is not an argument against force.

Nor does it imply that physicists should abandon the concept.

The language of force continues to play an indispensable role across many domains of physical reasoning.

Nothing in these essays suggests otherwise.


The more interesting question is a conceptual one.

What happens when a word remains stable while the work it performs continually changes?

At what point do we recognise that we are no longer simply refining an idea, but repeatedly reorganising the imagination through which that idea becomes intelligible?


Perhaps this is characteristic not only of force, but of scientific thought more generally.

Concepts endure.

Metaphors evolve.

The vocabulary remains familiar.

The imagination quietly transforms beneath it.


If so, the history of force offers more than the history of a single physical concept.

It provides a glimpse into the way scientific understanding itself develops.

Progress does not always consist in replacing one idea with another.

Sometimes it consists in discovering new ways for an old word to organise thought.

The continuity of language conceals the transformation of imagination.


This, perhaps, explains why metaphors deserve closer attention than they often receive.

They are not merely illustrative devices attached to completed theories.

They participate in the development of those theories.

They shape what becomes easy to ask.

What becomes difficult to imagine.

What begins to seem obvious.

And what gradually disappears from view.


Throughout this project, we have deliberately resisted asking whether one metaphor is correct and another mistaken.

That has never been our concern.

Our question has been different.

What possibilities does each metaphor open?

What forms of explanation does it encourage?

What assumptions accompany it?

And what new questions become thinkable once the imagination has been reorganised?


Those questions remain unfinished.

They always will.

For the history of scientific thought is not simply the accumulation of knowledge.

It is also the continuing evolution of the metaphors through which knowledge becomes intelligible.

To follow those metaphors is not to stand outside science.

It is to watch science thinking.


Our next series turns to another concept that appears, at first sight, entirely familiar.

Information.

Or so it increasingly seems.

Yet, like force before it, information has travelled a remarkable conceptual journey.

To understand how physics thinks about information, we must first ask a question that has quietly accompanied us throughout this project.

How did a word that once belonged to communication come to acquire such a central place in descriptions of the physical world?

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.6 Force as Curvature

Perhaps the most remarkable transformation in the imagination of force occurs when force itself begins quietly to disappear.

Throughout this series, we have followed a succession of changing images.

Force first appeared as push.

Then as pull.

Later as interaction.

Then as exchange.

Finally as field.

Each metaphor relocated the source of physical agency.

Each proposed a different answer to the question of what makes change happen.

The metaphor of curvature introduces something altogether more surprising.

It begins to ask whether that question itself has been wrongly framed.


The image is immediately distinctive.

Curvature is not first imagined as an action.

Nor as a transmission.

Nor as an organised field.

It is imagined as a property of geometry.

The emphasis shifts once again.

Attention turns away from agency and towards form.


This represents perhaps the most radical reorganisation of physical imagination encountered in this series.

Earlier metaphors sought the source of force.

The metaphor of curvature no longer begins there.

Instead, it asks how motion might be understood if the geometry of the physical situation already determines the paths that bodies naturally follow.

The imagination has changed direction.


This also changes the character of explanation.

To understand motion is no longer necessarily to identify what acted.

It may instead be to understand the geometry within which the motion occurred.

Agency no longer occupies the centre of explanation.

Structure does.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a remarkable simplification.

What previously required an additional concept—force—now appears capable of being understood through the organisation of the physical situation itself.

The explanatory burden quietly shifts.

Geometry begins to do work that had previously belonged to agency.


The metaphor therefore reorganises the imagination of change.

Earlier images encouraged us to think that bodies alter their motion because something influences them.

Curvature encourages a different intuition.

Bodies need not first be acted upon.

They may simply follow the possibilities already afforded by the geometry in which they participate.

The imagination has moved from intervention to organisation.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that easily disappear from view.

One of these is the assumption that geometry itself may possess explanatory significance.

Geometry is no longer merely a way of describing spatial relationships.

It increasingly becomes part of the explanation for physical behaviour.

The imagination grants explanatory status to form.


Another assumption concerns natural motion.

Motion is no longer understood primarily as something produced by external agency.

It increasingly appears as the unfolding of trajectories that are already implicit within the organised geometry of the situation.

The emphasis shifts from causing to following.


A further implication is that agency becomes increasingly difficult to locate.

Earlier metaphors asked where force resided.

In objects.

In relations.

In exchanges.

In fields.

The metaphor of curvature makes that question itself less pressing.

The explanatory work has migrated elsewhere.


Taken together, these features make the metaphor of curvature one of the most profound conceptual achievements in the history of physical thought.

It does not merely relocate force.

It quietly changes the role that force is asked to play.

The imagination begins to discover that some forms of physical behaviour may be understood without placing agency at the centre of explanation.


As with every successful metaphor in this series, familiarity gradually conceals the transformation.

Curvature comes to seem an entirely natural way of thinking about physical behaviour.

Its imaginative origins fade from view.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

The question is no longer,

Which object acts?

Nor,

What relation connects them?

Nor,

What is exchanged?

Nor even,

How is the field organised?

It has become,

What possibilities does the geometry itself afford?

The imagination of force has reached a remarkable destination.

Agency has quietly yielded to organisation.


The question, then, is not whether curvature provides a successful physical description.

Its scientific significance is beyond dispute.

The more interesting question is what kinds of explanation become possible once geometry assumes work that earlier metaphors assigned to force.

What forms of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to imagine while it quietly reorganises physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note what the journey has revealed.

The metaphors of force have repeatedly relocated the source of explanation.

From objects.

To relations.

To transmissions.

To organised situations.

And finally, to geometry itself.

Whether force remains the most illuminating way of describing that journey is the question to which we now turn.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.5 Force as Field

Perhaps the most far-reaching transformation in the imagination of force occurs when attention shifts away from the interacting bodies altogether and turns instead towards the physical situation in which they already stand.

The previous essay suggested that force could be imagined through exchange.

Agency no longer belonged exclusively to individual objects.

Nor solely to the relation between them.

It increasingly appeared through what passed between the participants.

The metaphor of field carries this transformation still further.

The surroundings themselves become conceptually significant.


The image is immediately distinctive.

A field is not first imagined as an object.

Nor as an event.

Nor as something exchanged.

It is imagined as an organised region.

The emphasis shifts once again.

Attention turns towards the conditions within which physical behaviour unfolds.


This represents another quiet transformation in scientific imagination.

Earlier metaphors invited us to search for agency in bodies, relations, or transmissions.

The field metaphor asks a different question.

What if the organisation of the surrounding situation is itself explanatory?

The imagination has found a new starting point.


This changes the character of physical explanation.

Instead of asking only what one body does to another, or what passes between them, attention increasingly turns towards the organised environment through which their behaviour becomes intelligible.

The surroundings are no longer merely the setting.

They become part of the explanation.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a reorganisation of agency.

Agency is no longer imagined as originating at a particular object.

Nor even as residing exclusively within a relation.

It increasingly appears as belonging to the organised conditions within which objects already participate.

The explanatory centre shifts once again.


The metaphor also changes the way continuity is imagined.

A push begins and ends.

An exchange unfolds.

A field, by contrast, is naturally conceived as an ongoing organisation.

Agency is no longer pictured primarily as an episode.

It becomes part of the continuing character of the physical situation itself.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that gradually become difficult to notice.

One of these is the assumption that organisation itself may possess explanatory significance.

The surrounding situation is no longer merely where physical events occur.

Its organisation contributes to understanding why they occur as they do.

The imagination grants explanatory status to the environment.


Another assumption concerns participation.

Objects are no longer understood simply as independent agents that subsequently interact.

They are increasingly imagined as already situated within an organised physical context.

The surrounding organisation becomes conceptually prior to particular events.


A further implication is that agency becomes distributed.

Rather than seeking a single origin of physical influence, the metaphor encourages us to understand behaviour through the organisation of the entire situation.

Agency no longer appears concentrated.

It becomes a feature of the organised whole.


Taken together, these features make the field metaphor one of the most remarkable achievements of physical imagination.

Without abandoning bodies, interactions, or exchanges, it reorganises them within a broader conceptual picture.

Explanation now begins, not with isolated acts of influence, but with organised physical conditions.


As with every successful metaphor in this series, familiarity gradually conceals the imaginative work it performs.

Fields come to seem entirely natural.

We cease to notice that they represent a distinctive way of imagining force.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

The question is no longer simply,

Which object acts?

Nor,

What passes between them?

It has become,

How is the physical situation organised?

The imagination of force has migrated once again.

Agency now appears through the continuing organisation of the surrounding conditions.


The question, then, is not whether fields exist.

Nor is it whether the metaphor has proved scientifically indispensable.

Its importance is beyond dispute.

The more interesting question is what kinds of explanation become possible once force is imagined through organised physical situations.

What forms of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to perceive while it quietly reshapes physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the imagination of force would continue to evolve.

The organised field itself would increasingly cease to be understood as the source of force.

Instead, what had once been called force would begin to appear as a consequence of geometry.

Force would gradually yield to curvature.

And with that shift, perhaps the most radical transformation in the history of physical agency would begin.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.4 Force as Exchange

Once force is imagined as interaction rather than unilateral action, another question naturally arises. What is it that makes the interaction possible?

The previous essay suggested that agency need not belong exclusively to one object acting upon another.

It may instead reside within the organised relation established between them.

The metaphor of exchange carries this thought a stage further.

The relation itself begins to be imagined through what passes between the participants.


The image is immediately suggestive.

To exchange is to give and receive.

Something moves.

Something is transferred.

The participants are connected through this movement.

The relation is no longer simply an encounter.

It becomes a process of transmission.


This represents another quiet transformation in the imagination of force.

Earlier metaphors organised agency around objects.

Later, around relations.

Now attention begins to settle upon the movement that constitutes the relation itself.

The imagination has found a new explanatory centre.


The exchange need not always be pictured in the same way.

Different physical theories have imagined different things passing between interacting bodies.

The details are not our concern here.

What matters is the conceptual picture.

Force becomes intelligible through transmission.


This changes the character of explanation.

To understand an interaction is no longer only to describe the participants.

Nor simply to describe the relation they establish.

It becomes natural to ask what is exchanged.

The imagination seeks a medium of intelligibility.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a reorganisation of agency.

Agency no longer appears as something possessed by one participant or even by the relation alone.

It increasingly appears through the ongoing movement that connects them.

The explanatory emphasis shifts once again.


The metaphor also changes the way continuity is imagined.

An exchange unfolds.

It has a direction.

It has a course.

It may begin, continue, and conclude.

Agency is therefore pictured less as a static property than as an organised process.

The imagination becomes increasingly dynamic.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that can easily become invisible.

One of these is the assumption that relations are constituted through transmission.

The interaction is no longer conceived simply as an abstract connection.

Its intelligibility lies in what passes between the participants.

Movement itself becomes explanatory.


Another assumption concerns reciprocity.

Exchange naturally suggests participation by more than one contributor.

Even where the exchange is not symmetrical, the metaphor encourages thinking in terms of organised mutual involvement rather than isolated acts of agency.

The relation becomes increasingly collaborative.


A further implication is that agency acquires a mediating character.

What matters is no longer only the participants.

Nor solely the relation they establish.

Attention increasingly turns toward the process that joins them.

The imagination has shifted again.


Taken together, these features make the metaphor of exchange a powerful extension of physical thought.

It preserves the relational imagination introduced by interaction.

Yet it enriches that imagination by asking how the relation itself becomes physically intelligible.

The explanatory burden now rests upon organised transmission.


As with every successful metaphor in this series, familiarity gradually conceals the work it performs.

Exchange begins to seem an entirely natural way of thinking about force.

Its imaginative origins quietly disappear.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

The question is no longer simply,

Which bodies interact?

Nor even,

What relation do they establish?

It has become,

What passes through that relation?

The imagination of force has migrated once again.

Agency now appears through organised transmission.


The question, then, is not whether exchanges occur.

Nor is it whether this metaphor has proved scientifically fruitful.

Its influence upon modern physical thought is unmistakable.

The more interesting question is what forms of explanation become possible once force is imagined through processes of exchange.

What kinds of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become easier to perceive while it quietly reorganises physical imagination?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the imagination of force would continue to evolve.

Attention would gradually shift away from what passes between interacting bodies.

It would increasingly turn towards the organised surroundings within which interactions occur.

Force would come to be imagined as field.

And with that shift, the conceptual landscape would change once again.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.3 Force as Interaction

There comes a point in the imagination of force when it no longer seems sufficient to ask which object acts upon which.

The earlier metaphors of push and pull both organise agency around individual bodies.

One body pushes another.

One body pulls another.

The direction of explanation remains relatively straightforward.

Agency belongs to one participant.

The other responds.


The metaphor of interaction quietly rearranges this picture.

Instead of asking which body possesses the force, attention turns to the relation established between them.

The encounter itself becomes conceptually significant.

Agency begins to migrate.


At first, this may appear to be only a change of language.

Instead of saying that one object acts upon another, we say that two objects interact.

Yet the conceptual consequences are surprisingly profound.

The emphasis no longer falls exclusively upon either participant.

It falls upon what occurs between them.


This changes the imagination of causation.

Earlier metaphors encouraged us to trace change back to an identifiable source.

Interaction invites a different picture.

The physical event is no longer explained solely by locating an origin of agency.

It is understood through the organised relation in which the participants jointly take part.


The metaphor therefore weakens an assumption that has quietly accompanied the earlier images.

Agency need not belong exclusively to one body.

It may instead arise through the relation that unites them.

The explanatory centre begins to shift.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a new understanding of reciprocity.

An interaction is not naturally divided into active and passive participants.

Each contributes to the event.

Each is involved in what occurs.

The distinction between actor and recipient becomes less sharply defined.

The imagination of force grows more symmetrical.


This also changes the style of explanation.

Instead of asking only what one body does to another, attention increasingly turns toward the character of the interaction itself.

What kind of relation is established?

How is that relation organised?

What follows from participating in it?

The relation becomes part of what requires explanation.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that can easily become invisible.

One of these is the assumption that relations possess explanatory significance.

The encounter is no longer merely the consequence of independently understood objects.

It becomes an object of thought in its own right.

The imagination grants explanatory status to the relation.


Another assumption concerns mutual participation.

The participants are no longer imagined as wholly self-contained agents whose behaviours simply happen to coincide.

Each becomes intelligible through the interaction in which it participates.

Agency is increasingly conceived as shared rather than unilateral.


A further implication is that events become irreducible.

The interaction is not merely the sum of two independent actions.

It possesses an organisation that belongs to the event itself.

The imagination begins to recognise that explanation may sometimes reside in the relation rather than in either participant considered alone.


Taken together, these features make the metaphor of interaction one of the most important transformations in the history of physical thought.

It preserves the intuition that physical change requires agency.

Yet it relocates that agency.

No longer exclusively within individual bodies.

Increasingly within the organised relation between them.


As with every successful metaphor in this series, familiarity gradually conceals its conceptual achievement.

Interaction comes to seem entirely ordinary.

We cease to notice that it represents a different way of imagining force.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

The question is no longer simply,

Which object caused the change?

It has become,

What kind of relation made the change possible?

The imagination of force has crossed an important threshold.

Agency is no longer located solely in things.

It has begun to inhabit the organisation of their participation.


The question, then, is not whether interactions occur.

Nor is it whether this metaphor has proved scientifically fruitful.

Its importance is unmistakable.

The more interesting question is what kinds of explanation become possible once agency is imagined as belonging to relations rather than exclusively to individual objects.

What forms of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become easier to perceive while it quietly reorganises physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the imagination of force would continue to evolve.

The relation itself would increasingly come to be understood through what passes between the participants.

Force would no longer be imagined simply as interaction.

It would be imagined as exchange.

And with that shift, another transformation in scientific imagination would begin.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.2 Force as Pull

If pushing is the most immediate image of physical agency, pulling introduces a different way of imagining how one thing may influence another.

Like pushing, pulling belongs to ordinary experience.

We pull open a drawer.

We pull a wagon.

We pull a rope taut.

The activity is entirely familiar.

Yet the imagination it encourages is subtly different.


A push begins by pressing against something.

A pull begins by drawing something towards oneself.

The direction of agency changes.

What matters is no longer only the act of pressing.

It is the possibility of bringing something nearer.


At first, this may seem a small distinction.

Yet it quietly alters the way physical influence is imagined.

The movement no longer appears simply as something driven from behind.

It may also be understood as something drawn from ahead.

The conceptual picture has changed.


The metaphor also broadens the imagination of connection.

When we push, contact is immediate and obvious.

When we pull, the connection may be mediated.

A rope.

A chain.

A handle.

The agency remains intelligible even though it is transmitted through something else.

The imagination begins to accommodate influence that is not exhausted by direct bodily contact.


This seemingly modest change proves remarkably fertile.

Once the mind becomes comfortable imagining agency as drawing rather than simply pressing, it becomes easier to ask a new kind of question.

Must the connection always be visible?

Or might bodies influence one another even when no obvious link can be seen?

The metaphor quietly prepares the imagination for possibilities that extend beyond everyday experience.


Another consequence of the pull metaphor is a reorganisation of explanation.

To explain motion is no longer only to identify what pushed.

It may instead be to identify what attracted.

The source of change is imagined as something towards which motion is directed.

Agency acquires an orienting character.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that often become difficult to notice.

One of these is the assumption that agency may act across separation.

Even where some connecting medium is imagined, the emphasis no longer falls upon simple contact between bodies.

Attention shifts toward the relation established between them.


Another assumption concerns directedness.

A pull is naturally oriented.

It has a source and a destination.

The imagination therefore begins to organise agency around relations of approach rather than merely around acts of impact.


A further implication is that absence of contact need not imply absence of influence.

The metaphor encourages the possibility that bodies may participate in physical change without the kind of immediate encounter that the push metaphor seemed to require.

The imagination has become more spacious.


Taken together, these features make the pull metaphor an important extension of physical thought.

It preserves the intuition that agency produces change.

Yet it loosens the conceptual dependence upon direct contact.

Influence is no longer confined to pressing.

It may also consist in drawing.


As with every successful metaphor, familiarity gradually conceals the imaginative work it performs.

Pulling begins to seem simply another way in which force operates.

Its conceptual novelty quietly disappears.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

Agency is no longer understood solely through encounters between touching bodies.

It has begun to inhabit the relation between them.

The imagination of force has taken a significant step away from contact and towards connection.


The question, then, is not whether pulls occur.

Nor is it whether the metaphor has proved scientifically valuable.

The more interesting question is what becomes possible once physical influence is imagined through relations that are not exhausted by contact alone.

What kinds of explanation does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become easier to conceive while it quietly reorganises physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the imagination of force would continue to evolve.

Agency would gradually cease to belong exclusively to one body acting upon another.

Increasingly, it would be understood as something arising between them.

Force would come to be imagined as interaction.

And with that shift, the very location of agency would begin to change.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.1 Force as Push

Perhaps the most immediate way of imagining force is through the experience of pushing.

Long before force became a scientific concept, it was already part of ordinary life.

We push open a door.

We push a chair across the floor.

We push a swing.

We push a stalled car.

In each case, something happens because one thing presses against another.

The experience is direct.

It requires no theory.


It is therefore unsurprising that push became one of the earliest and most enduring metaphors of physical agency.

A body moves because something pushes it.

Change occurs because one object acts upon another through contact.

The image feels so natural that it scarcely appears to be a metaphor at all.

It simply seems to describe the way the world works.


This metaphor organises physical thought around a straightforward intuition.

Agency belongs to the body that does the pushing.

The pushed object responds.

The direction of explanation is clear.

Something acts.

Something is acted upon.

The distinction appears self-evident.


The metaphor also gives contact a central conceptual role.

Pushing requires encounter.

The two bodies must come together.

Agency therefore appears local.

The source of change can be identified with the point at which one body presses against another.

The imagination of force begins with touch.


Another consequence of this image is that effort quietly becomes part of the conceptual landscape.

To push is not merely to make contact.

It is to exert.

The ordinary experience of muscular effort easily accompanies the metaphor, even when no human being is involved.

The language of physical agency quietly inherits the language of bodily action.


The push metaphor also encourages a particular style of explanation.

To understand why something moves is to identify what pushed it.

Every change invites the question:

What supplied the push?

Explanation proceeds by tracing visible effects back to an identifiable act of agency.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that often pass unnoticed.

One of these is the assumption that agency is asymmetric.

One body acts.

The other responds.

Although both bodies participate in the encounter, the imagination naturally privileges the one that appears to initiate the action.


Another assumption concerns contact.

Agency is most easily understood where bodies meet.

The possibility that change might occur without direct contact sits less comfortably within this picture.

The metaphor therefore encourages a world in which touching and causing become closely associated.


A further implication is that force becomes event-like.

A push begins.

It continues.

It ends.

Agency is imagined as something that happens during a particular episode rather than as a continuing feature of the wider physical situation.

The imagination naturally attends to moments of action.


Taken together, these features make the push metaphor extraordinarily intuitive.

It grounds physical explanation in everyday experience.

It offers a clear image of agency.

It provides a straightforward answer to the question of why things move.

Small wonder that it has exercised such a lasting influence upon physical thought.


Yet, as with every successful metaphor, familiarity gradually conceals its own imaginative work.

We cease to notice that pushing is one particular way of imagining agency.

It begins to feel less like an image drawn from experience than like the very meaning of force itself.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle occurs.

Agency itself comes to be pictured through contact.

The physical world is quietly organised around the intuition that change begins when one body presses upon another.

What began as an ordinary experience becomes a conceptual framework.


The question, then, is not whether pushes occur.

Of course they do.

Nor is it whether the metaphor has been scientifically fruitful.

Its importance is beyond dispute.

The more interesting question is what kinds of explanation become possible once force is imagined primarily as push.

What forms of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to conceive while it quietly organises physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that another image gradually emerged alongside the push.

It preserved the intuition of agency while relinquishing the necessity of contact.

Bodies appeared capable of influencing one another across separation.

Force would come to be imagined, not only as push, but as pull.

And with that shift, physical imagination would begin to travel in a very different direction.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — IV.0 How Physics Thinks About Force

Few words seem more familiar than force. We encounter it long before we encounter physics.

A child pushes open a door.

The wind forces a gate against its hinges.

An argument carries force.

Habit exerts its force upon us.

The force of law.

The force of personality.

The force of circumstance.

Long before physics adopts the word, it already occupies a rich landscape of human experience.


Perhaps for that reason, force often appears to need little explanation.

It seems obvious.

Things move because something makes them move.

Something acts.

Something resists.

Something overcomes that resistance.

The language feels entirely natural.


Yet the history of physics tells a more interesting story.

The meaning of force has not remained fixed.

It has undergone repeated transformations.

Sometimes force has been imagined as a push.

Sometimes as a pull.

Sometimes as an interaction.

Sometimes as an exchange.

Sometimes it appears to reside in fields.

Sometimes it seems to disappear into the geometry of space itself.

The word remains.

Its conceptual work changes.


This series is therefore not concerned with discovering what force really is.

Nor with deciding which physical theory should ultimately prevail.

Our question is a different one.

How has physics learned to imagine force?


That question may at first seem unusual.

Surely force is not imagined.

Surely it is measured.

Calculated.

Predicted.

And indeed it is.

But measurement and imagination are not competitors.

Every act of measurement already takes place within a conceptual picture that gives the measurement its significance.

The imagination does not replace calculation.

It helps make calculation intelligible.


Throughout the history of physics, different metaphors of force have opened different possibilities of explanation.

Each has organised physical reasoning in its own distinctive way.

Each has suggested different answers to questions that often remained implicit.

What makes change occur?

How do bodies influence one another?

Where should explanation begin?


These metaphors are not merely convenient illustrations added after the theory has been completed.

They often become part of the very conceptual resources through which theory develops.

A successful metaphor does more than simplify.

It allows new questions to be asked.

It permits new forms of reasoning.

It reshapes what becomes thinkable.


Like the metaphors explored in the previous series, the metaphors of force gradually become transparent.

Their imaginative origins recede from view.

What once provided a way of thinking begins to appear simply as the way the world is.

The metaphor quietly disappears behind its own success.


Our task, then, is not to decide whether these metaphors are true or false.

It is to observe what each one makes possible.

How does it organise physical thought?

What forms of explanation does it encourage?

What assumptions accompany it?

And what becomes difficult to notice once that way of imagining force has become familiar?


There is, however, one feature of force that distinguishes it from the subjects of our previous series.

Time asks us to imagine change.

Space asks us to imagine extension.

Matter asks us to imagine what endures.

Force asks something different.

It asks us to imagine agency.

Not simply what exists.

But what makes things happen.


That question has received remarkably different answers across the history of physics.

Sometimes agency belongs to one body acting upon another.

Sometimes it belongs to their interaction.

Sometimes it appears to reside in fields.

Sometimes it seems to disappear altogether.

The history of force is therefore not merely the history of a physical concept.

It is also the history of changing ways of imagining how the world becomes different.


We shall begin with perhaps the most immediate and intuitive image of all.

Force as push.

An image so deeply rooted in ordinary experience that it scarcely appears to be a metaphor at all.

And for that very reason, an image well worth examining.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — III.8 Matter as Information?

The final transformation in this series begins, not with a new image of matter, but with a word whose history lies elsewhere.

Throughout these essays, we have followed a succession of changing imaginations.

Matter has appeared as enduring substance.

As innumerable tiny bodies.

As sharply bounded objects.

As identifiable constituents.

As diffuse clouds.

As organised events.

And as coherent states.

Each metaphor has opened new possibilities for physical thought.

Each has quietly reorganised what it means to ask what matter is.


Now another term increasingly appears within the language of physics.

Information.

At first sight, the transition may seem unremarkable.

Scientific language frequently borrows words from ordinary life.

Yet this particular borrowing invites careful attention.

For information has its own conceptual history.


Long before it entered physics, information belonged primarily to the language of communication.

Something informed someone.

A message was conveyed.

A distinction became available.

The word organised acts of telling, interpreting, recording, and understanding.

Its natural home was not the description of material objects, but the organisation of communicative activity.


When the language of information enters physics, something subtle therefore occurs.

A concept developed within one domain of thought begins to participate in another.

The word remains familiar.

Its conceptual role changes.


This does not, by itself, create a difficulty.

Scientific language has always adapted existing vocabularies to new purposes.

The history of science is rich with such transformations.

The interesting question is not whether this should happen.

It is how the conceptual work of the word changes when it does.


Within the imagination of matter, information begins to function in new ways.

Instead of referring primarily to acts of communication, it increasingly contributes to descriptions of physical systems themselves.

The language shifts.

Information is no longer only something exchanged, recorded, or interpreted.

It increasingly becomes something through which matter itself may be understood.


This represents a distinctive kind of metaphorical transformation.

The earlier metaphors remained, broadly speaking, within the conceptual world of material imagination.

Substance gave way to corpuscles.

Corpuscles to atoms.

Atoms to clouds.

Clouds to excitations.

Excitations to coherent states.

Each step reorganised an existing family of images.

The introduction of information is different.

Here, an idea developed for one conceptual landscape begins to organise another.


As with every metaphor in this series, the change opens new possibilities of thought.

Relationships that were previously difficult to describe become newly intelligible.

Fresh forms of mathematical reasoning become available.

Novel questions can be asked.

The fertility of the metaphor is evident.

Its scientific importance requires no defence.


Yet its success also makes it easy to overlook the conceptual journey it has travelled.

The language of information gradually comes to seem entirely at home within physical description.

The migration itself recedes from view.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something subtle deserves our attention.

The question is no longer merely what information allows physicists to describe.

It is also what assumptions accompany the word as it moves from one conceptual domain into another.

Every metaphor carries part of its history with it.

Information is unlikely to be an exception.


The purpose of observing this is not to suggest that the language should be abandoned.

Nor is it to imply that information has been introduced illegitimately.

The history of science offers countless examples of concepts finding new and productive lives beyond the domains in which they first emerged.

The more interesting question is simply this.

What kinds of thought become possible once matter is imagined through information?

And what traces of the word's earlier conceptual life continue quietly to accompany it?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

To do so would require a different kind of inquiry.

Our concern throughout this series has been more modest.

We have simply watched the imagination of matter evolve.

Not by accumulating ever more accurate pictures.

But by repeatedly discovering new ways in which matter could be made thinkable.


Perhaps that is the broader lesson suggested by this history.

Scientific concepts do not merely describe an already completed world.

They also reshape the possibilities through which that world becomes intelligible.

The metaphors of matter are not ornaments added to physical theory.

They are among the conceptual resources through which physical theory learns to think.


The next series will turn to another family of scientific concepts.

Not matter.

But force.

And once again, we shall ask a question that has quietly accompanied us from the beginning.

Not What is it?

But:

How has physics learned to imagine it?

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — III.7 Matter as Condensate

Once matter begins to be imagined through organised activity rather than enduring objects, another possibility gradually comes into view. Perhaps what is fundamental is not the individual occurrence, but the coherence of many occurrences together.

The previous essay introduced the metaphor of excitation.

Matter was no longer imagined primarily as a thing.

It increasingly appeared through organised events.

The imagination had begun to move away from enduring objects toward continuing activity.

The metaphor of condensate carries this movement a step further.


A condensate is not first imagined as a collection.

Nor is it simply an unusually large number of similar constituents.

Instead, it is imagined as a coherent state.

The emphasis shifts once again.

Attention is no longer directed primarily toward the individual occurrence.

It turns toward the organisation that makes many occurrences intelligible as one.


This is a subtle but significant transformation.

The explanatory centre of gravity moves.

Individual events remain important.

Yet they no longer bear the whole explanatory burden.

What becomes conceptually distinctive is the coherence through which those events participate in a larger organisation.


The metaphor therefore changes the way matter is imagined.

Earlier images encouraged us to begin with individual entities.

Or later, with individual events.

The condensate image invites us to begin instead with collective organisation.

The whole is no longer treated simply as the sum of independently understood parts.

Its coherence becomes part of what requires explanation.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a reorganisation of identity.

Identity is no longer attached exclusively to individual constituents.

Nor solely to individual occurrences.

It increasingly becomes associated with the organised state itself.

The collective acquires conceptual prominence.


This also changes the character of explanation.

Instead of asking only how individual elements interact, attention turns toward the conditions under which coherent organisation arises and is maintained.

The explanatory focus shifts from interaction to coordination.

The imagination of matter becomes increasingly attentive to patterns of collective order.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that are easily overlooked.

One of these is the assumption that coherence possesses explanatory significance.

The organised whole is no longer merely a convenient summary of many individual elements.

It becomes something whose organisation contributes to understanding what is observed.


Another assumption concerns participation.

The individual occurrence is no longer imagined as conceptually complete in isolation.

Its significance increasingly depends upon the organised state within which it participates.

The metaphor quietly weakens the intuition that individuality alone provides the natural starting point for explanation.


A further implication is that organisation itself becomes thinkable.

Earlier metaphors often treated organisation as something imposed upon already existing constituents.

Here, organisation moves closer to the centre of physical imagination.

The coherent state is no longer simply what results from prior explanation.

It increasingly becomes part of explanation itself.


Taken together, these features make the metaphor of condensate a remarkable extension of the imagination of matter.

Without abandoning constituents or events, it shifts attention toward the coherence that allows them to be understood together.

The conceptual emphasis moves once again.

Not away from multiplicity.

But toward organised unity.


As with every successful metaphor in this series, familiarity gradually conceals the transformation.

The language of coherent states begins to feel entirely natural.

What was once a novel conceptual achievement quietly becomes part of the ordinary vocabulary of physical reasoning.

The metaphor withdraws from attention.

Its explanatory power remains.


At that point, something subtle has occurred.

Matter is no longer imagined primarily through enduring substances.

Nor through tiny bodies.

Nor even through organised events alone.

Increasingly, it is imagined through the coherence of organisation itself.

The imagination has travelled a considerable distance.

The explanatory weight now rests less upon isolated individuals than upon the patterns that allow them to participate in a shared state.


The question, then, is not whether condensates exist.

Nor is it whether this metaphor should replace those that came before.

The more interesting question is what becomes possible once coherence itself begins to organise the imagination of matter.

What forms of explanation does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become less visible while it quietly reshapes physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that one further transformation now presents itself.

A word that once belonged primarily to communication, interpretation, and symbolic exchange has increasingly entered the language of physics.

Matter, it is sometimes suggested, may be understood through information.

Whether this represents another metaphorical transformation, and what such a transformation might imply, will be the subject of our final essay.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — III.6 Matter as Excitation

Perhaps the most remarkable transformation in the imagination of matter occurs when matter ceases to be understood primarily as an object and begins instead to be imagined as an event.

The previous essay introduced a significant change.

Matter was no longer pictured simply as sharply bounded constituents.

It increasingly appeared through patterns of distribution.

The imagination had already begun to loosen its attachment to the image of the tiny object.

The metaphor of excitation carries that transformation much further.


An excitation is not first imagined as a thing.

It is imagined as something that happens.

The emphasis shifts from object to occurrence.

Instead of asking what matter is, attention begins to turn toward what matter does.

The language itself becomes more dynamic.


This changes the character of physical imagination in a profound way.

Earlier metaphors encouraged us to picture matter as something that persists while participating in different processes.

The metaphor of excitation invites a different intuition.

Persistence itself begins to be understood through continuing patterns of activity.

The event acquires explanatory priority.


This is a subtle shift.

An event is not simply another kind of object.

It is something whose identity is inseparable from its occurrence.

The imagination therefore begins to organise matter less through enduring constituents and more through structured activity.

What matters is no longer only what is present.

It is what is taking place.


Another consequence of this metaphor is a weakening of the distinction between entity and process.

In earlier images, processes happened to objects.

Now the object itself begins to be conceived through the language of process.

The conceptual boundary between thing and happening becomes less sharply defined.


This also changes the way explanation proceeds.

Instead of asking how independently existing constituents interact, attention increasingly turns toward the conditions under which particular forms of activity arise.

The imagination shifts once again.

Organisation no longer concerns only the arrangement of things.

It concerns the organisation of events.


The metaphor also introduces a distinctive form of continuity.

An excitation may persist.

Yet its persistence is not imagined in quite the same way as the persistence of a solid object.

It is more akin to the continuing existence of an organised pattern than to the enduring presence of a material body.

Continuity itself begins to acquire a different character.


At the same time, the metaphor imports assumptions that gradually become familiar.

One of these is the assumption that activity can itself function as a bearer of identity.

Identity no longer belongs exclusively to enduring objects.

It may instead belong to stable forms of occurrence.

The imagination becomes increasingly comfortable with this possibility.


Another assumption concerns process before object.

Rather than beginning with independently existing things and asking how they behave, the metaphor encourages beginning with organised activity from which familiar object-like behaviour may emerge.

The explanatory direction has quietly reversed.


A further implication is that change ceases to be secondary.

Earlier metaphors often treated change as something happening to already existing entities.

Here, change is no longer merely an episode in the life of matter.

It becomes part of the very way matter is imagined.

Activity is no longer accidental.

It becomes conceptually fundamental.


Taken together, these features make the metaphor of excitation one of the most far-reaching transformations in the history of physical thought.

Without abandoning the ambition to describe the material world, it profoundly reconfigures the way that world is imagined.

Matter is no longer understood primarily through enduring things.

It increasingly becomes intelligible through organised events.


Yet, as before, the success of the metaphor gradually conceals its own imaginative work.

The language of excitations begins to feel entirely natural.

The conceptual shift that once demanded a new way of thinking quietly disappears from view.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.


At that point, something remarkable has occurred.

Across the history of physics, the imagination of matter has travelled from enduring substance, to constituent bodies, to sharply bounded objects, to distributed patterns.

Now it arrives at organised occurrences.

The language of things has gradually yielded to the language of events.

Not by abrupt replacement.

But through a series of quiet conceptual transformations.


The question, then, is not whether matter really is an excitation.

Nor is it whether this metaphor should supersede those that came before.

The more interesting question is what kinds of thought become possible once matter is imagined as organised activity.

What forms of explanation does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to articulate while it quietly reshapes physical imagination?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the transformation did not end with events.

The imagination of matter would continue to evolve.

Attention would begin to shift once more.

Not toward isolated occurrences.

But toward coherent collective states.

Matter would increasingly be imagined as condensate.

And with that, another chapter in its conceptual history would begin.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — III.5 Matter as Clouds

A striking transformation in the imagination of matter occurs when its smallest constituents begin to lose the very qualities that had made them so intuitively appealing.

Throughout the previous essays, matter has become increasingly object-like.

Substance gave way to constituent bodies.

Those bodies acquired definite boundaries.

They became identifiable kinds.

The smallest constituents appeared as increasingly stable foundations upon which physical explanation could be built.

Now, however, the imagination begins to move in a different direction.


Instead of picturing matter as sharply bounded objects, physics increasingly finds itself speaking of clouds.

The image is immediately different.

A cloud has no single, precise boundary.

Its edges fade rather than terminate.

Its form is present without being rigidly defined.

It occupies a region without filling it in the manner of a solid body.


This change does not merely replace one picture with another.

It changes what counts as an intelligible description.

The question is no longer simply where a constituent is.

Attention begins to shift toward where it may be found.

The language of precise localisation gives way to the language of distributed presence.


The cloud metaphor introduces a different kind of spatial imagination.

Instead of discrete objects occupying definite positions, matter is conceived as exhibiting patterns of distribution.

Presence becomes something that may vary across a region rather than being confined to a sharply bounded location.

The imagination of matter becomes diffuse.


Another consequence of this image is a weakening of the intuitive distinction between object and region.

A cloud is not merely located within a space.

It extends through it.

Its identity is no longer captured simply by specifying a point.

The constituent begins to be imagined through its spread rather than solely through its boundary.


This also changes the character of explanation.

Earlier metaphors encouraged us to think in terms of individual objects and their interactions.

The cloud metaphor encourages attention to patterns.

What matters is no longer only the identity of an individual constituent, but the way its presence is distributed.

The imagination begins to favour configuration over localisation.


At the same time, the metaphor carries assumptions of its own.

One of these is the assumption that indeterminacy of boundary need not imply absence of structure.

A cloud may lack sharply defined edges while still exhibiting recognisable organisation.

The loss of rigid boundaries does not entail conceptual disorder.

It invites a different kind of order.


Another assumption concerns graded presence.

A cloud is not simply present or absent.

Its density may vary.

Some regions are more concentrated than others.

The metaphor therefore makes it possible to imagine matter as exhibiting degrees of presence rather than only fixed occupation.


A further implication is that precision itself changes character.

Precision is no longer achieved solely by identifying exact locations.

It may instead consist in describing the form of a distribution.

The imagination shifts from points to patterns.


Taken together, these features make the cloud metaphor a remarkable departure from the earlier images of matter.

It preserves the ambition to describe the material world with great care.

Yet it does so by loosening the very intuitions of solidity and sharply bounded individuality that had previously organised physical thought.

The imagination has not abandoned structure.

It has reimagined what structure can be.


As with every successful metaphor, familiarity gradually conceals its imaginative origins.

We begin to speak of clouds as though they simply present themselves to thought.

The metaphor becomes transparent through use.

Its conceptual novelty quietly disappears.


At that point, something subtle has changed.

Matter is no longer imagined primarily through enduring objects.

Nor even through identifiable constituents.

Increasingly, it is imagined through organised distributions whose boundaries are no longer the principal source of intelligibility.

The imagination has shifted from things toward patterns of presence.


The question, then, is not whether the cloud metaphor is correct or incorrect.

Its scientific usefulness is beyond dispute.

The more interesting question is what kinds of explanation become possible once matter is imagined as distributed rather than sharply bounded.

What forms of reasoning does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to imagine while it quietly reshapes physical thought?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the transformation did not end with clouds.

The imagination of matter would continue to evolve.

Patterns of distributed presence would gradually give way to an even more radical image.

Matter would increasingly be imagined, not primarily as an object at all, but as an excitation.

And with that shift, the language of things would begin to yield to the language of events.

How Physics Thinks: A Study of Its Metaphors — III.4 Matter as Atoms

The imagination of matter changes once again when the tiny bodies themselves cease to be merely generic constituents and become identifiable kinds of constituent.

The earlier image of corpuscles asked us to imagine innumerable minute bodies from whose combinations the visible world emerges.

The billiard-ball metaphor gave those bodies clearer boundaries, greater solidity, and a more mechanical character.

Yet an important question remained.

Were all these tiny bodies fundamentally alike?

Or did they differ from one another in ways that mattered?


The metaphor of the atom answers by introducing individual kinds.

Matter is no longer imagined simply as a multitude of tiny objects.

It becomes a multitude of distinguishable kinds of tiny objects.

The constituent bodies are no longer interchangeable.

Each possesses its own identity.


This is a subtle but profound transformation.

Difference is no longer explained solely through arrangement.

It may also arise through the differing natures of the constituents themselves.

Matter acquires an internal diversity.

The smallest units are no longer merely many.

They become many kinds.


This change alters the character of explanation.

To understand a material is no longer only to ask how its constituents are organised.

It also becomes necessary to ask what kinds of constituents are present.

Composition acquires a richer meaning.

It now concerns not only quantity and arrangement, but identity.


The metaphor also changes the way permanence is imagined.

Previously, persistence attached largely to the continued existence of constituent bodies.

Now it also attaches to the distinctive identities of those constituents.

The individual kinds are treated as stable enough to support systematic explanation across many different materials and processes.


Another consequence of this image is the emergence of classification as an explanatory resource.

The smallest constituents become members of recognisable kinds.

Similarity and difference can be investigated at the level of the constituents themselves.

The imagination of matter begins to acquire something like its own natural taxonomy.


At the same time, the atom is no longer merely a tiny version of an ordinary object.

It begins to possess a conceptual richness of its own.

Attention turns inward.

The smallest constituent is no longer simply the endpoint of explanation.

It becomes something that can itself be characterised, distinguished, and investigated.

The imagination of matter has acquired another level.


Yet, as with every metaphor in this series, the atomic image imports assumptions that gradually become difficult to notice.

One of these is the assumption that identity resides in the constituent itself.

The distinctive character of matter is understood as arising from the intrinsic identities of its smallest units.

Difference begins from below.


Another assumption concerns stability of kind.

The individual constituent is imagined as belonging to a recognisable category whose identity remains sufficiently constant to support explanation across different contexts.

The smallest units become reliable bearers of physical identity.


A further implication is that explanation increasingly proceeds through classification before interaction.

Before asking how constituents combine, we first ask what kinds of constituents they are.

Identity becomes conceptually prior to organisation.

The imagination of matter is quietly reordered.


Taken together, these features make the atomic metaphor extraordinarily productive.

It provides a way of understanding both continuity and diversity within the material world.

It allows the immense variety of observable materials to be related to a comparatively small number of distinguishable constituent kinds.

It gives physical explanation a new conceptual economy.


Yet its very success can make the metaphor difficult to perceive.

The atom comes to seem less like a particular way of imagining matter than like the obvious foundation of material reality.

Its conceptual history quietly recedes from view.

The metaphor becomes transparent through familiarity.


At that point, something subtle occurs.

The smallest constituents cease to function merely as explanatory devices.

They begin to appear as the unquestioned building blocks from which reality itself is assembled.

The imagination of matter has become organised around identifiable units whose existence seems increasingly self-evident.


The question, then, is not whether atoms exist.

Nor is it whether this metaphor should be retained.

The more interesting question is what kinds of thought become possible once matter is imagined through stable constituent identities.

What forms of explanation does this image encourage?

And what possibilities become more difficult to imagine while it quietly structures physical reasoning?


We will not attempt to answer those questions here.

Instead, we simply note that the imagination of matter did not stop with identifiable constituents.

A further transformation would occur.

The sharply bounded building blocks would begin to lose their clear outlines.

Matter would gradually come to be imagined less as a collection of tiny objects than as something diffuse.

Not solid bodies.

But clouds.

And with that shift, another conceptual landscape would begin to emerge.