DJ Kevles - Annals of Human Genetics, 2011 - Wiley Online Library ... Some observers have wondered whether new genetic knowledge would be deployed by the state for positiveeugenics, for attempts to engineer new Einsteins, Mozarts, or athletes like Michael Jordan (it must be pointed out that the genomic prognosticators rarely mention ... Related articles - All 2 versions
AM Stern - Hispanic American Historical Review, 2011 - Duke Univ Press ... In particular, her concept of Page 2. 432 HAHR / August / Stern “preventive eugenics,” which seeks to transcend the binary strictures of “nega- tive” and “positive” eugenics, offers considerable explanatory power in the case of Veracruz. ...
[HTML] from genetics.orgEA Carlson - Genetics, 2011 - Genetics Soc America ... Muller hoped that he could initiate a positiveeugenics program in the USSR. ... These critics did not see any difference between positiveeugenics and negative eugenics because they assumed that to work both types of eugenics would have to be coercive. ... Related articles - All 2 versions
D Browne - Analysis, 2011 - analysis.oxfordjournals.org ... A familiar view is that selection for therapeutic reasons ('negative eugenics') is permissible, whereas selection for reasons of enhancement ('positiveeugenics') should be prohibited. Wilkinson's analysis here is again valuable. ... All 2 versions
[PDF] from stanford.eduS Gonzales… - 2011 - biochem118.stanford.edu ... American population would suffer as a result, eugenic measures were implemented. One notable example of “positiveeugenics” in America was the Oneida Community founded in 1848 by John Humphrey Noyes (Fernald 5 ... Related articles - View as HTML