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Psycho-Pass Explained: The Algorithmic War for the Human Mind

What happens when warfare stops being physical and becomes psychological? In Psycho-Pass, peace is no longer maintained by armies on a battlefield, but by the Sibyl System—an AI network that scans minds, predicts criminality, and automates judgment before a crime even happens.

This video explores how Psycho-Pass turns conflict into a form of internal, algorithmic control. From the OODA loop and the panopticon to Shogo Makishima’s challenge to enforced order, this analysis breaks down how the series critiques predictive policing, surveillance, and the seductive promise of perfect security. It also looks at why Akane Tsunemori represents the human need for moral friction in a world ruled by systems.

If you enjoy anime analysis, cyberpunk philosophy, and AI-focused video essays, subscribe for more from Terra Glitch.

Chapters
0:00 The battlefield moves into the mind
0:12 Japan’s peace under the Sibyl System
0:41 The OODA loop vs. algorithmic judgment
1:26 Crime coefficients, latent criminals, and the Dominator
2:01 The panopticon and self-policing society
2:33 Why Makishima breaks the system
3:05 Nietzsche, agency, and philosophical violence
3:53 Akane Tsunemori and the failure of automated morality
4:52 Predictive policing and the real-world parallel
5:42 The danger of comfortable algorithmic rule

#PsychoPass #AnimeAnalysis #AISurveillance #CyberpunkAnime

Видео Psycho-Pass Explained: The Algorithmic War for the Human Mind канала Terra Glitch
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