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"It's hard to tell stories about critters that are not human. John W. Campbell tried it, in "Twilight," and everybody says it's a wonderful story, and nobody ever reads it twice."
- Jerry Pournelle

Morality Rating-Computer  
  A computer system able to determine moral deviancy.  

The last crime in the Solar System — in fact, in any of the nine systems that made up the Galactic League of Planets — had been committed in 2231, more than five hundred years earlier. The Dwoskin Morality Rating-Computer could 'spot the slightest tendency to deviation' from the social norm and the treatment was always successful. With the end of crime, interest in crime literature rapidly waned. For four hundred years no one had read mystery stories and most people had even forgotten there had ever been such a form of literature.
Technovelgy from Assignment to Aldebaran, by Kendall Foster Crossen.
Published by Thrilling Wonder Stories in 1953
Additional resources -

Compare to the precrime analytical wing from The Minority Report (1956), by Philip K. Dick. Also, check the article Russia Bans Cursing, Demolition Man Morality Device Next and this article on the field of Moral Performance Enhancement.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Assignment to Aldebaran
  More Ideas and Technology by Kendall Foster Crossen
  Tech news articles related to Assignment to Aldebaran
  Tech news articles related to works by Kendall Foster Crossen

Morality Rating-Computer-related news articles:
  - Amazon Echo And Google Home Should Have Morality Software

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