, which allows operations on complex numbers to be visualized as simple motions through ordinary space Lakoff and Núñez's avowed purpose is to begin laying the foundations for a truly scientific understanding of mathematics, one grounded in processes common to all human cognition. They find that four distinct but related processes
metaphorically structure basic arithmetic: object collection, object construction, using a measuring stick, and moving along a path.
WMCF builds on earlier books by Lakoff (1987) and Lakoff and Johnson (1980, 1999), which analyze such concepts of
metaphor and image schemata from second-generation
cognitive science. Some of the concepts in these earlier books, such as the interesting technical ideas in Lakoff (1987), are absent from
WMCF. Lakoff and Núñez hold that mathematics results from the human cognitive apparatus and must therefore be understood in cognitive terms.
WMCF advocates (and includes some examples of) a
cognitive idea analysis of
mathematics which analyzes mathematical ideas in terms of the human experiences, metaphors, generalizations, and other cognitive mechanisms giving rise to them. A standard mathematical education does not develop such idea analysis techniques because it does not pursue considerations of A) what structures of the mind allow it to do mathematics or B) the
philosophy of mathematics. Lakoff and Núñez start by reviewing the psychological literature, concluding that human beings appear to have an innate ability, called
subitizing, to count, add, and subtract up to about 4 or 5. They document this conclusion by reviewing the literature, published in recent decades, describing experiments with infant subjects. For example, infants quickly become excited or curious when presented with "impossible" situations, such as having three toys appear when only two were initially present. The authors argue that mathematics goes far beyond this very elementary level due to a large number of
metaphorical constructions. For example, the
Pythagorean position that all is number, and the associated crisis of confidence that came about with the discovery of the irrationality of the
square root of two, arises solely from a metaphorical relation between the length of the diagonal of a square, and the possible numbers of objects. Much of
WMCF deals with the important concepts of
infinity and of limit processes, seeking to explain how finite humans living in a finite world could ultimately conceive of the
actual infinite. Thus much of
WMCF is, in effect, a study of the
epistemological foundations of the
calculus. Lakoff and Núñez conclude that while the
potential infinite is not metaphorical, the actual infinite is. Moreover, they deem all manifestations of actual infinity to be instances of what they call the "Basic Metaphor of Infinity", as represented by the ever-increasing sequence 1, 2, 3, ...
WMCF emphatically rejects the
Platonistic philosophy of mathematics. They emphasize that all we know and can ever know is
human mathematics, the mathematics arising from the human intellect. The question of whether there is a "transcendent" mathematics independent of human thought is a meaningless question, like asking if colors are transcendent of human thought—colors are only varying wavelengths of light, it is our interpretation of physical stimuli that make them colors.
WMCF (p. 81) likewise criticizes the emphasis mathematicians place on the concept of
closure. Lakoff and Núñez argue that the expectation of closure is an artifact of the human mind's ability to relate fundamentally different concepts via metaphor.
WMCF concerns itself mainly with proposing and establishing an alternative view of mathematics, one grounding the field in the realities of human biology and experience. It is not a work of technical mathematics or philosophy. Lakoff and Núñez are not the first to argue that conventional approaches to the philosophy of mathematics are flawed. For example, they do not seem all that familiar with the content of Davis and
Hersh (1981), even though the book warmly acknowledges Hersh's support. Lakoff and Núñez cite
Saunders Mac Lane (the inventor, with
Samuel Eilenberg, of
category theory) in support of their position.
Mathematics, Form and Function (1986), an overview of mathematics intended for philosophers, proposes that mathematical concepts are ultimately grounded in ordinary human activities, mostly interactions with the physical world. ==Examples of mathematical metaphors==