Linked bibliography for the SEP article "Human Enhancement" by Eric Juengst and Daniel Moseley
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If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. Some bibliographies are not going to be represented correctly or fully up to date. In general, bibliographies of recent works are going to be much better linked than bibliographies of primary literature and older works. Entries with PhilPapers records have links on their titles. A green link indicates that the item is available online at least partially.
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- Agar, N., 2004. Liberal Eugenics: In Defense of Human Enhancement, Malden: Blackwell. (Scholar)
- –––, 2013. Humanity’s End: Why We
Should Reject Radical Enhancement, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Allhoff, F., Lin, P., Moor, J., and Weckert, J., 2009. “Ethics of human enhancement: 25 questions & answers”, version 1.0.1., US National Science Foundation. [available online] (Scholar)
- Anderson, W. F., 1989. “Human Gene Therapy: Why Draw a Line?” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 14(6): 681–693. (Scholar)
- Annas, G. J., with Andrews, L. B. and Isasi, R. M.,
2002. “Protecting the Endangered Human: Toward an International
Treaty Prohibiting Cloning and Inheritable Alterations”,
American Journal of Law and Medicine, 28 (2/3):
151–178. (Scholar)
- Asch, A. and Block, J., 2011. “Against the Enhancement
Project: Two Perspectives”, Free Inquiry, 32(1):
25–33. (Scholar)
- Azevedo, M., 2016. “The Misfortunes of Moral Enhancement”, The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 41(5): 461–479. (Scholar)
- Basl, J., 2010. “State Neutrality and the Ethics of Human Enhancement Technologies’, AJOB Neuroscience, 1(2): 41–48. (Scholar)
- Benjamin, M., Muyskens, J. and Saenger, P., 1984. “Short Children, Anxious Parents: Is Growth Hormone the Answer?” Hastings Center Report, 14(2): 5–9. (Scholar)
- Berger, E. M. and Gert, B. M., 1991. “Genetic Disorders and the Ethical Status of Germ-Line Gene Therapy”, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 16(6): 667–683. (Scholar)
- Bernstein, J., Perlis, C. and Bartolozzi, A. R.,
2004. “Normative Ethics in Sports Medicine”, Clinical
Orthopaedics and Related Research, 420: 309–318. (Scholar)
- Binstock, R., 2003. “The War on Anti-Aging
Medicine”, Gerontologist, 43: 4–14. (Scholar)
- Blackmore, S., 2012. “She Won’t Be
Me”, Journal of Consciousness Studies
19:16–19. (Scholar)
- Bordo, S., 1993. Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body, Berkeley: University of California Press. (Scholar)
- Bostrom, N., 2003. “Human Genetic Enhancements: A Transhumanist Perspective”, The Journal of Value Inquiry, 37(4): 493–506. (Scholar)
- Brock, D., 1998. “Enhancements of Human Function: Some
Distinctions for Policymakers”, in E. Parens
(ed.), Enhancing Human Traits, Washington: Georgetown
University Press, pp. 48–69. (Scholar)
- Bublitz, J. C. and Merkel, R., 2009. “Autonomy and Authenticity of Enhanced Personality Traits”, Bioethics, 23(6): 360–374. (Scholar)
- Buchanan, A., Brock, D., Wikler, D., and Daniels, N., 2000. From Chance to Choice: Genetics and Justice, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Buchanan, A., 2011. Beyond Humanity?: The Ethics of Biomedical Enhancement, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Callahan, D., 1995. “Aging and the Life Cycle: A Moral
Norm?” in A World Growing Old: The Coming Health Care
Challenges, Washington: Georgetown University Press,
pp. 21–27. (Scholar)
- Caplan, A., 2004. “An Unnatural Process: Why It Is Not
Inherently Wrong to Seek a Cure For Aging”, in S. Post and
R. Binstock (eds.), The Fountain of Youth: Cultural, Scientific
and Ethical Perspectives on a Biomedical Goal, Oxford and New
York: Oxford University Press, 114–24. (Scholar)
- Carey, T. S., Melvin, C. L., and Ranney, L. M.,
2008. “Extracting Key Messages from Systematic
Reviews”, Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 14, Suppl. 1:
28–34. (Scholar)
- Carter, J., and Pritchard, D., 2019. “The Epistemology of
Cognitive Enhancement’, The Journal of Medicine and
Philosophy, 44(2): 220–242. (Scholar)
- Clarke, S., Savulescu, J., Coady, C.A.J., Guibilini, A., and
Sanyal, S. ($$eds.), 2016. The Ethics of Human Enhancement:
Understanding the Debate, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Clouser, K. D., Culver, C. M. and Gert, B., 1981. “Malady: A New Treatment of Disease”, The Hastings Center Report, 11(3): 29–37. (Scholar)
- Coakley, J. J., 1998. Sport in Society: Issues and
Controversies, Boston: McGraw-Hill. (Scholar)
- Cole-Turner, R., 1998. “Do Means Matter?” in E. Parens
(ed.), Enhancing Human Traits: Ethical and Social
Implications, Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press,
pp. 151–161. (Scholar)
- Comfort, N., 2012. The Science of Human Perfection: How Genes
Became the Heart of American Medicine, New Haven: Yale University
Press. (Scholar)
- Conrad, P., and D. Potter, 2004. “Human Growth Hormone and
the Temptations of Biomedical Enhancement”, Sociology of
Health and Illness, 26(2): 184–215. (Scholar)
- Conrad, P., 2007. The Medicalization of Society: On the
Transformation of Human Conditions into Treatable Disorders,
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. (Scholar)
- Council for Responsible Genetics, 1993. “Position Statement
on Human Germ-Line Manipulation”, Human Gene Therapy, 4:
35–39. (Scholar)
- Craigie, J., 2014. “Moral Modification and the Social Environment’, Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology, 21(2): 127–130. (Scholar)
- Crockett, M., 2014. “Pharmaceutical Effects on Moral Behavior: A Neuroscientific Perspective’, Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology, 21(2): 131–134. (Scholar)
- Daniels, N., 1974. “IQ, Heritability and Human Nature”, PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, pp. 143–180. (Scholar)
- –––, 2000. “Normal Functioning and the Treatment-Enhancement Distinction”, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 9(03): 309–322. (Scholar)
- Daniels, N. and Sabin, J. E., 1994. “Determining
“Medical Necessity” in Mental Health Practice: A Study of
Clinical Reasoning and a Proposal for Insurance
Policy”, Hastings Center Report, 24(6): 5–13. (Scholar)
- Davis, D. S., 2010. Genetic Dilemmas: Reproductive Technology,
Parental Choices, and Children’s Futures, Oxford/New York:
Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Davis, K., 1995. Reshaping the Female Body: The Dilemma of Cosmetic Surgery, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- DeGrazia, D., 2000. “Prozac, Enhancement, and Self-Creation”, Hastings Center Report, 30(2): 34–40. (Scholar)
- DeGrey, A. D., 2003. “The Foreseeability of Real Anti-Aging
Medicine: Focusing the Debate”, Experimental
Gerontology, 38: 927–34. (Scholar)
- Diekema, D. S., 1990. “Is Taller Really Better? Growth
Hormone Therapy in Short Children”, Perspectives in Biology
and Medicine, 34: 109–23. (Scholar)
- Douglas, T., 2008. “Moral Enhancement”, Journal of Applied Philosophy, 25: 228–245. (Scholar)
- Duncan, S., 2016. “The Nature of the Emotions and the Ethics of Cosmetic Psychopharmacology’, Public Affairs Quarterly, 30(1): 67–82. (Scholar)
- Earp, B., 2018. “Psychedelic Moral Enhancement’ in Hauskeller and Coyne (eds.) 2018. (Scholar)
- Elliott, C., 1998. “The Tyranny of Happiness: Ethics and
Cosmetic Psychopharmacology”, in E. Parens (ed.), Enhancing
Human Traits: Ethical and Social Implications, Washington:
Georgetown University Press, pp. 177–188. (Scholar)
- –––, 2011. “Enhancement Technologies and the Modern Self”, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 36(4): 364–374. (Scholar)
- Engelhardt, H. T., 1990. “Human Nature Technologically Revisited”, Social Philosophy and Policy, 8(1): 180–191. (Scholar)
- Flanigan, J., 2017. Pharmaceutical Freedom: Why Patients Have a Right to Self-Medicate, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Fitzgerald, K., 2008. “Medical Enhancement: A Destination of
Technological, Not Human, Betterment”, in B. Gordijn and
R. Chadwick (eds.), Medical Enhancement and Post-Modernity,
Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 39–55. (Scholar)
- Freedman, C., 1998. “Aspirin for the Mind? Some Ethical
Worries About Psychopharmacology”, in E. Parens
(ed.), Enhancing Human Traits, Washington: Georgetown
University Press, pp. 135–150. (Scholar)
- Friedmann, T., 1998. The Development of Human Gene
Therapy, Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Press. (Scholar)
- Fukuyama, F., 2002. Our Posthuman Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution, New York: Picador Books. (Scholar)
- Gems, D., 2011. “Tragedy and Delight: The Ethics of
Decelerated Ageing”, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal
Society of London (Series B), 366(1561): 108–112. (Scholar)
- Gert, B., Culver, C. M., and Clouser, K. D., 2006. Bioethics: A Systematic Approach, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Gilman, S. L., 2000. Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural
History of Aesthetic Surgery, Princeton: Princeton University
Press. (Scholar)
- Gimin, D., 2000. “Cosmetic Surgery: Beauty as a
Commodity”, Qualitative Sociology, 23: 77–98. (Scholar)
- Glannon, W., 2008, “Psychopharmacological Enhancement’, Neuroethics, 1(1): 45–54. (Scholar)
- Good, B., 1994. Medicine, Rationality, and Experience: An
Anthropological Perspective, New York: Cambridge University
Press. (Scholar)
- Guignon, C., 2004. On Being Authentic, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Habermas, J., 2003. The Future of Human Nature, Cambridge: Polity Press. (Scholar)
- Harris, J., 2007. Enhancing Evolution: The Ethical Case for Making Better People, Princeton/Woodstock: Princeton University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2011. “Moral Enhancement and Freedom”, Bioethics, 25(2): 102–111. (Scholar)
- –––, 2016. How to Be Good: The Possibility of Moral Enhancement, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Hayflick, L., 2001–2002. “Anti-Aging Medicine: Hype,
Hope and Reality”, Generations, 24(4): 20–27. (Scholar)
- Hauskeller, M. 2013. Better Humans?: Understanding the Enhancement Project, London: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Hauskeller, M. and Coyne, L. (eds.), 2018. Moral Enhancement: Critical Perspectives (Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement: Volume 83), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Hoberman, J., 1992. Mortal Engines: The Science of Performance
and the Dehumanization of Sport, Caldwell: The Blackburn
Press. (Scholar)
- Hogle, L. F., 2005. “Enhancement Technologies and the
Body”, Annual Review of Anthropology, 34(1):
695–716. (Scholar)
- Hope, T., 2011. “Cognitive Therapy and Positive Psychology Combined: A Promising Approach to the Enhancement of Happiness”, in J. Savulescu, R. ter Meulen, and G. Kahane (eds.), Enhancing Human Capacities, New York: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 230–244. (Scholar)
- Hughes, J. 2004. Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to The Redesigned Human of the Future, Cambridge, MA: Westview Press. (Scholar)
- Johnson, Y., Bishop, J., and Toner, G., 2019. “The Moral
Imperative to Morally Enhance’, The Journal of Medicine and
Philosophy, 43 (5): 485–489. (Scholar)
- Joyce, R. 2013. “Review of Unfit for the Future? The
Need for Moral Enhancement, by Ingmar Persson and Julian
Savulescu”, Analysis, 73(3): 587–589. (Scholar)
- Juengst, E. T., 1997. “Can Enhancement Be Distinguished from Prevention in Genetic Medicine?” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 22(2): 125–142. (Scholar)
- –––, 2017, “Crowdsourcing the Moral Limits of Human Gene Editing?’, Hastings Center Report, 47(3): 15–23. (Scholar)
- Kamm, F. M., 2005. “Is There a Problem with Enhancement?” The American Journal of Bioethics, 5(3): 5–14. (Scholar)
- Kass, L., 1985. Toward a More Natural Science: Biology and Human Affairs, New York: Free Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 1997. “The Wisdom of
Repugnance”, New Republic, 216(22): 17–26. (Scholar)
- –––, 2001. “L’chaim and Its Limits:
Why Not Immortality?” First Things, 113 (May):
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- –––, 2003. Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology and
the Pursuit of Happiness, President’s Council on Bioethics,
Executive Office of the President. (Scholar)
- Keenan, J., 1999. “Whose Perfection Is It Anyway? A Virtuous
Consideration of Enhancement, Christian Bioethics, 5(2):
104–120. (Scholar)
- Kimmelman, J., 2009. Gene Transfer and the Ethics of
First-in-Human Research: Lost in Translation, Cambridge and New
York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Kitcher, P., 1997. The Lives to Come: The Genetic Revolution
and Human Possibilities, New York: Touchstone. (Scholar)
- LaFollette, H., 1980. “Licensing Parents’, Philosophy and Public Affairs, 9(2): 182–197. (Scholar)
- Levy, N., Douglas, Thomas, Kahane, G., Terbeck, S., Cowen, P., Hewstone, M., Savulescu, J., 2014a. “Are You Morally Modified? The Moral Effects of Widely Used Pharmaceuticals,’, Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology, 21(2): 111–126 (Scholar)
- –––, 2014b. “Disease, Normality and Current Pharmacological Moral Modification’, Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology, 21(2): 135–138 (Scholar)
- Liao, S. M., 2005. “Are ‘Ex Ante’ Enhancements
Always Permissible?” American Journal of Bioethics
5(3): 23–25. (Scholar)
- –––, 2006a. “The Right of Children to Be Loved”, Journal of Political Philosophy, 14(4): 420–440. (Scholar)
- –––, 2006b. “The Idea of a Duty to Love”, Journal of Value Inquiry, 40(1): 1–22. (Scholar)
- Liao, S. M. and Roache, R., 2011. “After Prozac”, in
J. Savulescu, R. ter Meulen, and G. Kahane (eds.), Enhancing Human
Capacities, New York: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 245–256. (Scholar)
- Little, M., 1998. “Cosmetic Surgery, Suspect Norms, and the
Ethics of Complicity”, in E. Parens (ed.), Enhancing Human
Traits, Washington: Georgetown University Press,
pp. 162–176. (Scholar)
- Loland, S., 2002. Fair Play in Sport: A Moral Norm System, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Mauron, A. and J. Thevoz, 1991. “Germ-Line Engineering: A Few European Voices”, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 16: 649–666. (Scholar)
- McKibben, B., 2004. Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered
Age, New York: St. Martin’s Griffin. (Scholar)
- Mehlman, M. J., 1999. “How Will We Regulate Genetic
Enhancement?” Wake Forest Law Review, 34: 671–
617. (Scholar)
- –––, 2003. Wondergenes: Genetic Enhancement
and the Future of Society, Bloomington, IN: Indiana University
Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2009. The Price of Perfection:
Individualism and Society in the Era of Biomedical Enhancement,
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2012. Transhumanist Dreams and
Dystopian Nightmares, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press. (Scholar)
- Mehlman, M. J., Berg, J. W., Juengst, E. T., and Kodish, E., 2011. “Ethical and Legal Issues in Enhancement Research on Human Subjects”, Cambridge Quarterly of Health Care Ethics 20(1): 30–45. (Scholar)
- Miah, A., 2004. Genetically Modified Athletes: Biomedical Ethics, Gene Doping and Sport, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Mihailov, E., and Savulescu, J., 2018, “Social Policy and Cognitive Enhancement: Lessons from Chess’, Neuroethics, 11(2): 115–127 (Scholar)
- Miller, F. G., Brody, H., and Chung, K. C., 2000. “Cosmetic Surgery and the Internal Morality of Medicine”, Cambridge Quarterly of Health Care Ethics, 9(3): 353–364. (Scholar)
- Munthe, C., 2000. “Selected Champions: Making Winners in the
Age of Genetic Technology”, in T. Tännsjö and
C. Tamburrine (eds.), Values in Sport: Elitism, Nationalism Gender
Equality and the Scientific Manufacture of Winners, New York:
Routledge, pp. 217–231. (Scholar)
- Murray, T., 1987. “The Ethics of Drugs in Sport”, in
R. Strauss (ed.), Drugs and Performance in Sports,
Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, pp. 11–21. (Scholar)
- –––, 2009. Ethics, Genetics and the Future
of Sport: Implications of Genetic Modification and Genetic
Selection, Washington: Georgetown University Press. (Scholar)
- Overall, C., 2003. Aging, Death and Human Longevity: A Philosophical Inquiry, Berkeley: University of California Press. (Scholar)
- Parens, E., 1995. “The Goodness of Fragility: On the Prospect of Genetic Technologies Aimed at the Enhancement of Human Capacities”, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 5(2): 141–153. (Scholar)
- –––, (ed.), 1998. Enhancing Human Traits:
Ethical and Social Implications, Washington: Georgetown
University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2005. “Authenticity and Ambivalence: Toward Understanding the Enhancement Debate”, The Hastings Center Report, 35(3): 34–41. (Scholar)
- –––, 2013. “On Good and Bad Forms of Medicalization”, Bioethics, 27(1): 28–35. (Scholar)
- Parfit, D., 1984. Reasons and Persons, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Parks, J. A., 1999. “On the Use of Ivf by Post-Menopausal Women”, Hypatia, 14(1): 77–96. (Scholar)
- Paulo, N., and Bublitz, C. (eds.), 2019. Special Issue
of Neuroethics: “Political Implications of Moral
Enhancement”, Springer
- Persson, I. and Savulescu, J., 2012. Unfit for the Future: The Need for Moral Enhancement, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2014, “Against Fetishism About Egalitarianism and in Defense of Cautious Bioenhancement’, The American Journal of Bioethics, 14 (4): 39–42 (Scholar)
- Post, S. G. and Binstock, R. H., 2004. The Fountain of Youth: Cultural, Scientific, and Ethical Perspectives on a Biomedical Goal, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Robert, J. S. and Baylis, F., 2003. “Crossing Species Boundaries”, The American Journal of Bioethics, 3(3): 1–14. (Scholar)
- Roduit, J., Baumann, H., and Heilinger, J. C., 2013. “Human
Enhancement and Perfection”, Journal of Medical Ethics,
39(10): 647–650. doi:10.1136/medethics-2012–100920 (Scholar)
- Sandberg, A., 2011. “Cognition Enhancement: Upgrading the Brain”, in J. Savulescu, R. ter Meulen, and G. Kahane, (eds.), Enhancing Human Capacities, New York: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 71–91. (Scholar)
- Sandel, M., 2007. The Price of Perfection: Ethics in the Age
of Genetic Engineering, Cambridge: Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Savulescu, J., ter Meulen, R. and Kahane, G. (eds.),
2011. Enhancing Human Capacities, New York:
Wiley-Blackwell. (Scholar)
- Schermer, M., 2008a. “Enhancements, Easy Shortcuts, and the Richness of Human Activities”, Bioethics, 22(7): 355–363. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008b. “On the Argument That
Enhancement Is “Cheating”, Journal of Medical
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- Selgelid, M., 2014, “Moderate Eugenics and Human Enhancement”, Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 17: 3–12. (Scholar)
- Shickle, D., 2000. “Are ‘Genetic Enhancements’
Really Enhancements?” Cambridge Quarterly of Health Care
Ethics, 9: 342–352. (Scholar)
- Scully, J. L. and Rehmann-Sutter, C., 2001. “When Norms
Normalize: The Case of Genetic “Enhancement”, Human
Gene Therapy, 12: 87–95. (Scholar)
- Selgild, M., 2013. “Moderate eugenics and human enhancement”, Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy, 17(1):3–12. doi:10.1007/s11019-013-9485-1 (Scholar)
- Sikela, J. M., 2006. “The Jewels of Our Genome: The Search
for the Genomic Changes Underlying the Evolutionarily Unique
Capacities of the Human Brain”, PLoS Genetics,
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- Silvers, A., 1998. “A Fatal Attraction to Normalizing:
Treating Disabilities as Deviations from “Species-Typical”
Functioning”, in E. Parens (ed.), Enhancing Human
Traits, Washington: Georgetown University Press,
pp. 177–202. (Scholar)
- Sparrow, R., 2011. “A Not-So-New Eugenics”, Hastings Center Report, 41(1): 32–42. (Scholar)
- –––, 2014. “Egalitarianism and Moral Bioenhancement”, American Journal of Bioethics, 14(4): 20–29 (Scholar)
- –––, 2014b. “Better Living Through Chemistry? A Reply to Savulescu and Persson on ‘Moral Enhancement’”, Journal of Applied Philosophy, 31(1): 23–32. (Scholar)
- –––, 2015. “Enhancement and Obsolescence: Avoiding the ‘Enhanced Rat Race’”, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 25(3): 231–260. (Scholar)
- –––, 2016. “Human Enhancement for
Whom?’ in Clarke, Savulescu, Coady, Guibilini,
and Sanyal (eds.) 2016. (Scholar)
- Tännsjö, T., 2000. “Is Our Admiration for Sports Heroes Fascistoid?” in T. Tännsjö and C. Tamburrine (eds.), Values in Sport: Elitism, Nationalism Gender Equality and the Scientific Manufacture of Winners, London: Routledge, pp. 24–38. (Scholar)
- –––, 2005. “Genetic Engineering and
Elitism in Sport”, in C. Tamburrine and T. Tännsjö
(eds.), Genetic Technology and Sport: Ethical Questions, New
York: Routledge, pp. 57–70. (Scholar)
- Spitzley, J. 2018. “Enhancing the Nature-of-Activities Account of Enhancement’, Neuroethics, 11(3): 323–335. (Scholar)
- Taylor, C., 1991. The Ethics of Authenticity. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Tennison, M., 2012. “Moral Transhumanism: The Next Step”, Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 37: 405–416. (Scholar)
- Tolleneer, J., Sterckx, S. and Bonte, P., 2013. Athletic Enhancement, Human Nature and Ethics: Threats and Opportunities of Doping Technologies, New York: Springer. (Scholar)
- Trilling, L., 1971. Sincerity and Authenticity, Cambridge: Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Walters, L. and Palmer, J. G., 1997. The Ethics of Human Gene
Therapy, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- White, G., 1993. “Human Growth Hormone: The Dilemma of Expanded Use in Children”, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 3(4): 401–409. (Scholar)
- Whitehouse, P. J., Juengst, E., Mehlman, M., and Murray, T. H., 1997. “Enhancing Cognition in the Intellectually Intact”, The Hastings Center Report, 27(3): 14–22. (Scholar)
- Wikler, D., 1999. “Can We Learn from Eugenics?” Journal of Medical Ethics, 25(2): 183–194. (Scholar)
- Wiseman, H., 2014. “SSRIs as Moral Enhancement Interventions: A Practical Dead End’, American Journal of Bioethics, 5(3): 21–30. (Scholar)
- –––, 2016 The Myth of the Moral Brain: The Limits of Moral Enhancement, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (Scholar)
- Zak, P. J., 2011. “The Physiology of Moral
Sentiments”, Journal of Economic Behavior and
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- Zohny, H. 2015. “The Myth of Cognitive Enhancement Drugs’, Neuroethics, 8(3): 257–269. (Scholar)