I don't like to read that last lines of books until I arrive there, but with Helena Curtis' 1159 page textbook »Biology« (Worth Publishers 1983) I make a notable exception:
»In the age of dinosaurs, the earliest primates survived, it would appear, largely by their own wits; now, if we are to survive the monsters of our own creating, we will have to do it again, by the contents of our own skulls. For within the human mind that complex collection of neurons and synapses resides the uniquely human capacity to accumulate knowledge, to plan with foresight, and so to act with enlightened self-interest and even, on occasion, with compassion.«
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