This conceptual note proposes a minimal schematic model for describing how affective experience becomes socially consequential through language, recording, amplification, adoption, and institutional fixation. Rather than treating emotion as a direct causal driver of history or institutions, the model treats emotion as an input that becomes effective only after translation into language, persistence in record environments, repeated amplification, and selective uptake. The note also distinguishes fixed past events from effective pasts and treats future representation as a present-acting variable rather than a mere forecast. Its central claim is that emotion, record, institution, and temporal representation are not separable domains, but recursively coupled layers of the same process. The equations in this note are conceptual schemata rather than empirically validated dynamical laws. This note was developed with the assistance of ChatGPT for structuring, drafting, and language refinement. The conceptual direction, model design, and final editorial decisions are the author’s own.
Hinano Kimura (Mon,) studied this question.