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Nicholas Agar
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Liberal eugenics: In defence of human enhancement
N Agar
John Wiley & Sons, 2008
8022008
Humanity's end: why we should reject radical enhancement
N Agar
Mit Press, 2010
399*2010
Truly human enhancement: a philosophical defense of limits
N Agar
MIT Press, 2013
294*2013
Liberal eugenics
N Agar
Public Affairs Quarterly 12 (2), 137-155, 1998
2861998
Life's intrinsic value: Science, ethics, and nature
N Agar
Columbia University Press, 2001
2532001
Liberal eugenics
N Agar
(No Title), 2004
1852004
Whereto transhumanism?: the literature reaches a critical mass
N Agar
The Hastings Center Report 37 (3), 12-17, 2007
1252007
What do frogs really believe?
N Agar
Australasian Journal of Philosophy 71 (1), 1-12, 1993
861993
Why is it possible to enhance moral status and why doing so is wrong?
N Agar
Journal of medical ethics 39 (2), 67-74, 2013
852013
Biocentrism and the Concept of Life
N Agar
Ethics 108 (1), 147-168, 1997
691997
How to be human in the digital economy
N Agar
MIT Press, 2019
642019
Moral bioenhancement is dangerous
N Agar
Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (4), 343-345, 2015
452015
A question about defining moral bioenhancement
N Agar
Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (6), 369-370, 2014
442014
Enhancing genetic virtue?
N Agar
Politics and the Life Sciences 29 (1), 73-75, 2010
432010
Can ‘eugenics’ be defended?
W Veit, J Anomaly, N Agar, P Singer, DS Fleischman, F Minerva
Monash Bioethics Review 39 (1), 60-67, 2021
412021
DESIGNING BABIES: MORALLY PERMISSIBLE WAYS TO MODIFY THE HUMAN GENOME 1
N Agar
Bioethics 9 (1), 1-15, 1995
401995
Why we should defend gene editing as eugenics
N Agar
Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (1), 9-19, 2019
362019
Valuing species and valuing individuals
N Agar
Environmental Ethics 17 (4), 397-415, 1995
361995
How to treat machines that might have minds
N Agar
Philosophy & Technology 33 (2), 269-282, 2020
352020
Embryonic potential and stem cells
N Agar
Bioethics 21 (4), 198-207, 2007
332007
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