Valid / invalid for metaphors, to me, depends on the audience.
For laypeople, ill equiped to deal with high orders of complexity: spooky.
For people in the field: details.
For some audiences being accurate is less descriptive than being reductionist. Because if you lose your audience's attention, you've communicated no accuracy.
For laypeople, ill equiped to deal with high orders of complexity: spooky.
For people in the field: details.
For some audiences being accurate is less descriptive than being reductionist. Because if you lose your audience's attention, you've communicated no accuracy.