On analogy as method

Analogical thinking is more powerful than logical thinking. This is not a rhetorical flourish or an appeal to poetry over rigor. It is a claim about how understanding actually works — about what happens when you recognize that two apparently unlike things share a structure, and that the structure teaches you something neither thing could teach alone.

The Western intellectual tradition has spent most of its energy on deduction and induction, on syllogism and experiment. These are powerful instruments. But they operate within a single domain at a time, and their power comes from narrowing: exclude the irrelevant, isolate the variable, control the conditions. Analogy does something different. It moves between domains. It says: the pattern here is the pattern there, and the gap between here and there is where the insight lives.

Conceptual slippage is generative

Douglas Hofstadter has spent a career arguing that analogy is not a decorative feature of human cognition but its core mechanism. When you understand something, you are recognizing it as a variant of something you already understand. The new thing “slips” into the frame of the old thing, but the frame deforms in the process — and that deformation is the new knowledge.

Every concept we have is essentially nothing but a tightly packaged bundle of analogies… all we do is selectively call to mind various experiences we’ve had and then, in a flash, abstract out what seems to be essential.

This is not loose thinking. This is thinking at its most structurally ambitious. The slippage is not error — it is the mechanism. When a Hermetic text says “as above, so below,” it is making an analogical claim about the structure of reality: that the pattern governing the macrocosm governs the microcosm, and that recognizing the correspondence is itself a form of knowledge.