The true weight of this episode lies in the unseen adversary. For the first time, Finch meets his match. As he attempts to clear Powell’s name, he realizes he is playing a game of chess against a "human virus." This adversary, using the handle , isn't motivated by money or simple political gain; she is motivated by the purity of information and the challenge of finding the man who created the Machine.
"Root Cause" is the moment Person of Interest evolved. It established that the greatest threat to Finch and Reese wasn't just corrupt cops or mobsters, but the ideological battle over the Machine itself. By introducing Root, the show set the stage for a multi-season exploration of artificial intelligence, ethics, and the cost of total surveillance. VocГЄ solicitou : Pessoa.de.Interesse.T01E13.MP4...
In the thirteenth episode of its debut season, Person of Interest shifts from a procedural "case-of-the-week" format toward its larger, more ambitious mythological narrative. "Root Cause" introduces a formidable new type of antagonist: one who doesn’t just break the law, but understands the fundamental "source code" of the world Harold Finch has built. The Victim and the Frame-up The true weight of this episode lies in the unseen adversary