The beginning of the obituary in Science:

Gerald M. Edelman, who was born in New York in 1929, died at his home in La
Jolla, California, on 17 May 2014. With him, biology has lost a great
scientist and something even rarer—a profound thinker. Edelman's work in
the 1960s revealed the chemical structure of antibody molecules, for which
he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1972 with Rodney
Porter. In the 1970s, Edelman turned to studying how cells stick to each
other, which led to the discovery of cell adhesion molecules (CAMs).
Afterward, Edelman directed much of his efforts to understanding “how the
brain gives rise to the mind” and formulated a general theory of brain
function—the theory of neuronal group selection.
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