In 1938 Agar was elected president of the Eugenics Society of Victoria. He said "it was a disastrous state of affairs that size of families was usually in inverse ratio to intelligence."[5]
Agar Street in the Canberra suburb of Bruce was dedicated in his name.[6]
Agar was the author of the book A Contribution to the Theory of the Living Organism (1943). The book was based on the system of Whitehead's philosophy of the organism and argued for a form panpsychism.[7]
Publications
Experiments on Inheritance in Parthenogenesis (1914)
Cytology: With Special Reference to the Metazoan Nucleus (1920)