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Psycho-Pass Goes Beyond Anime: The Ethical Realities of A {“Perfect Society”

Psycho PassOrson Wells 1984, Blade Runner, Thomas Moore Utopia, minority Report.

gun laws, massarces, rape, inequioty, injustices, prejudices, riddled with the consequences of the free will and free minded. Restrictions of laws and the increased surveillience

is a peaceful existence worth conformity and total control?

Psycho-Pass explores societal and psychological themes by thoroughly delving into the human psyche via an animated medium. based on the ethical theory of consequentialism, in which the only factor taken into account when determining the ethics of a situation is the end result. the correct decision is the one with the most favourable results.  How this society and our own deal with the ethical issues surrounding crime, the various characters interact with the system, brining forth their own perspective on the Sibyl System, in which we are able to live through them to learn more of the beauty and the flaws of the society they live in. Actively engaging in the intellectual boxing rink of the ethics in which to stand for.

the hue of Psycho Pass would most certainly be gray as black and white simply do not exist. The moral ambiguity and moral boundaries

The moral ambiguity and moral boundaries culminating on the basis of moral compromise

 

Psycho Passphilosophical rhetoric. An error , flaw, disruption, rip in the fabric of the Sybil system Shogo Makishima is a renegade a rebel, a hero against the restraints of the society but he too could be the image of both the villain and the victim of the system. he feels displaced and deviant within the structure of society itself.[23]

hero and villain become intertwined in an eternal dance of Yin and Yang

An outcast, not able to be scanned deemed ‘criminally systematic’. His isolation from not being recognized inspired his actions that cause a threat Tsunrmori as well as appropriately bringing forth the question of the system she chooses to defend.

the outcast is absorbed as an integral part of the sytstem that was unable to recognize him.

Quoting the likes of Kierkegaard and Rousseu with Dantesque flare. to further implement his emphasis of the free will Makashima believes a decision only has importance because of the motivation and will of the person deciding, an opinion that is much more representative of virtue-

Individual liberty,” he writes, “is not an asset of civilization.” In this world view, people had freedom before there was civilization, and the story ever since has been a systematic endeavor to curtail it. This is mostly in the form of sanctioned violence monopolized by the state, but also through forms of mind-control, which even the most “free-thinking” among us do not realize we are undergoing. “Civilization has to make every effort to limit man’s aggressive drives and hold down their manifestations through the formation of psychical reactions,” Freud writes later in Civilization and its Discontents.

 

In the conclusion of the series, Tsuenmori is revealed to the system’s secret, the mechanics and where the faults lie. It.

The comparison of Makishima to Kagima parallels and is relative to the

,

The realism is solidified by the oblivious sense of free will and relative autonomy within the oppressive system

Nobody is ostracized or banished, as long as their crime-coefficient doesn’t go up.

Psycho-Pass differs in critical ways, providing a more sophisticated reflection on “dys-utopia.” This nightmare doesn’t feel like a nightmare, it is a deadly dream.

Psycho PassThe Sybil System is composed of a collective brain, more accurately a collective conscious. A sum of the asystematic that derives from the conformed and the standards set by the system. The paradox of a system solely based off the diversity combined to a whole to create conformity. The Sibyl System, Big Brother, the omnipresent utilitarian which governs the fictitious state. Targeting individuals who are considering performing actions that might cause stress to others.But this raises the question of whether it is morally and socially acceptable to charge individuals with crimes they have not yet committed. Is this preemptive judgment fair? Does the potential to commit a crime necessarily correlates with actually committing the crime? this is Sybil’s most glaring flaw. 

overriding the individual’s needs in favor of general social value. It is morally and socially acceptable to kill individuals who may potentially commit crimes, so long as we accept that the harm that criminal causes to society outweigh the harm we cause to an individual who is falsely charged. In other words, the Sibyl System operates on the principles of opportunity cost and acceptable risk. But relying on the Sibyl System paradoxically creates a society which fears no crime as a whole, but individuals who personally fear the consequences of the Sibyl System’s verdicts. 

Emotional repression is also explored in Psycho-Pass. The identification of latent criminals is partially based around the avoidance of emotions that society judges to be negative, such as sadness or anger. To avoid being identified as a latent criminal, one must not feel these emotions heavily outside, where their Psycho-Pass can be scanned. Kotaku states, “because of these scans, Psycho-Pass shows an interesting future where ‘mental beauty’ is as sought after as physical beauty.” The performance, qualifications of a citizen are relative factors to the cleanliness of their hues and their ability to satisfy the system. Valuing hue color as an asset provides availability and access. Tsunemori achieves such  a high ranking position within the society could be due to her abiding the system or possibility of the risk she has to it.

The Parallel of the society in the anime to the one we exist
appropriately named psycho pass along the premise of analyzing the criminal capabilities and possibilities and liabilities the same method could be applied to the way the show is  symbolic of  society’s pursuit of a perfected system. Charismatic and idealistic
quoting Rousseau and presenting theologies of the mind and free will the show is more of an interpersonal self-retrospect
those in paradise and those in utter anarchy each having the same characteristics i following an idoleogy in mass without indiviudal choice. The decisions of the free will aren’t present in both alternatives.The disguied corruotion under the guise of utopia.
those vying for people and those in power sustaining the surface of the agneda wihile following their own
value that make us human and the motives we live by. What we do or would be willing to do if unsupervied
an espose on the darkest of us all. The obious sides are questioned
kagima is a perfect condutin and charmism ma of all societal figurehead an ddictators but he lacks the thirst for power that is a common theme of the series an accurate metaphor of the society we exist in. The ignorance we abide by in the trust of our perceived society. The abstractness and true extremes of the show are not too astray as it underlying tones are very much too. The symoathey for the ciminal the brutality of following the beset before them thoughout the series rules. It makes the watcher question wither the answer they would hope to be obvious is truly the write on
justice and the pursuit
intervention of domestic affairs
freedom and security
the futality of following such idealistic pursuits the inevidable failure. Brings forht every watchers pessimism no matter how much we believe we’re optimists
if the goal forever pursued were to be attained realized and administered to perceived success to satisfy and exceed the expectations
infallible preposition
what peace do we wish to achieve? Most importantly how do we do so?

moral compromises, the ambiguities, the feints-and-parries required in a society that says you are free, but in which you sense you are not. It’s about the survival techniques that are needed to function within the spooky, Orwellian limitations of a society that ultimately, like Tsunemori, you believe in

with the state of politics and government as it is, it could be true that the society we seek and pursue is one of

The parallels of the society in Psycho Pass to the one in which exist now can’t be ignored however it should never be assumed. The extremeity of the society acts as an analysis and warning of the pursuit of a perfected society and the ethical scaifices made to be so.
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