Designing external environments and products that reflect and support the psychological and emotional interior lives of users.
Murasaki's literary genius lies in her penetrating observation of inner emotional states—jealousy, longing, doubt, joy—mapped onto physical spaces and sensory details. For designers, this principle means understanding that form follows not merely function, but the inner landscape of human experience. A workspace design should account for solitude and concentration; a product interface should anticipate user anxiety or delight. This requires deep observation and empathy, asking not only 'what does this do?' but 'what does this person feel?' The interior landscape principle transforms design from superficial decoration into psychological architecture that honors the complexity of human inner life. It recognizes that design's true purpose is to create containers for the full spectrum of human experience.
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