@u2764 There's a reason my critique, the other day, of "space" (as a model) hinges on an interrogation of "embodied membership". Our Lakoffean urge to anchor in metaphors of embodied cognition can lead us astray.
Which is not to say there isn't an embodied metaphor that will better grok and grapple online whateverthisis, but perhaps that metaphor rests in something bodies do, rather than where bodies are.
Annemarie Mol might be helpful here.
@u2764 Space most definitely provides a delineation! On this we are in resounding agreement.
Is space, however, the only possible source of such a necessary delineation? Unfold that indefinite article.
That is provides "a" delineation does not indicate that it provides "the" delineation, or even that it provides "the most useful or productive" delineation.
Do we not want such tools (here, metaphors) as will most clearly and powerfully delineate our object of inquiry?
I give very little truck to theoretical appeals to an "imaginary". (And yes, I saw your Freud toot earlier.) What if one doesn't conceive of a nation by giving it location and borders?
What if in enacting, in doing, location and borders, as such, bodies conceive a nation? To ape Ricoeur, bodies thus preconceive, conceive, and reconceive a nation?
Borders are not merely lines on a map. Rather, linemaking in the course of mapmaking is one of a bundle of practices by which bodies do borders.