This essay explores the pre-linguistic experience of emotion, examining how feelings arise, circulate, and leave residual traces within the human body and psyche. Using the metaphor of a central human figure as a mediator, the study highlights the nonlinear, cyclical nature of affect, emphasizing intensity and memory over rational interpretation. Through a combination of graphical representation and philosophical reflection, it argues that emotions do not belong to the individual; rather, the individual serves as a route through which emotion passes. This approach bridges psychological theory, phenomenology, and visual representation to capture what often eludes language.
Victoria Akopova (Fri,) studied this question.