# Mechanisms at the core of the Chinese script invention

**Authors:** Ludovica Ottaviano, Silvia Ferrara

PMC · DOI: 10.1515/cog-2025-0041 · Cognitive Linguistics · 2026-02-02

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how the Chinese script was invented, showing that visual thinking, not sound, was key to its development.

## Contribution

It presents new evidence that visual metaphors and metonymy, not phonology, shaped the Chinese script's evolution.

## Key findings

- Visual emphasis and iconic components were central to the script's architecture.
- Orthography directly maps to semantics, with phonology playing a secondary role.
- Chinese writing developed independently through visual cognitive mechanisms.

## Abstract

This article explores the cognitive foundations of Chinese writing by analyzing the earliest attestations on oracle bone and bronze inscriptions from the Late Shang (1250–1045 BCE) to the Western Zhou (1045–771 BCE) periods. Integrating palaeographic and cognitive perspectives, we show that metaphorical and metonymic devices of the visual type, through visual emphasis on key configurations (such as pars pro toto), conceptual extension of meaning, and organization of iconic core components, were crucial in shaping and anchoring the visual and semiotic architecture of the script. These cognitive mechanisms reveal a primacy of the visual structure of the script, supported by neuroscientific evidence of direct orthography-to-semantics mapping, with phonology acting only as a secondary refining mechanism. These findings challenge traditional phonocentric models of writing evolution and illustrate an internal developmental trajectory grounded on visual metaphor and metonymy that confirms, at last, the independent invention of Chinese writing.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MESH:D020521)
- **Species:** Equus caballus (domestic horse, species) [taxon 9796], Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Sus scrofa (pig, species) [taxon 9823], Canis lupus familiaris (dog, subspecies) [taxon 9615], Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949599/full.md

## References

97 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949599/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12949599