Psyche Inc tells the story psychology doesn’t want told. It starts in the nineteenth-century asylum and workhouse, where industrial capitalism first had to decide what to do with people who couldn’t—or wouldn’t—fit the new regime. From there it follows psychology as it threads itself through the modern world: the laboratory, the school, the wartime testing centre, the VA clinic, the welfare office, the HR department, the prison, the app, the feed. At each step, the pattern repeats. Techniques tried first on the poor, the colonised, prisoners, patients and conscripts reappear as “best practice” in education, therapy, advertising, security and platform design. The same knowledge base that treats trauma also designs interrogation regimes. The profession that talks about “wellbeing” helps employers cut costs and discipline staff. The science that claims objectivity keeps lining up with the grant, the contract and the billing code. Built on thousands of sources and more than fifty pages of tightly documented endnotes, Psyche Inc pulls scattered scandals and specialist research into a single, gripping narrative. It doesn’t lean on conspiracy to make its case; it shows, step by step, how psychology’s role as a management tool follows from the basic demands of profit, empire and control. By the end, the neat line between “good psychology” and “bad psychology” doesn’t hold. There is only what the system requires—and what it would take to build something beyond it. This isn’t a self-help book and it isn’t a polite professional history. It’s a ruthless, accessible history of how the modern mind was rebuilt to suit the needs of power—and what that means for anyone who’s ever been diagnosed, medicated, assessed, counselled or simply told to be more “resilient.”