I wish to express my belated condolences to Phil's family, as well as to his fellow friends and colleagues, and am sorry that I had not done this sooner, but I have been left uncharacteristically speechless regarding his passing. As everyone knows, I can (and often do) carry on endlessly about scientific matters, but I am not nearly so eloquent when it comes to expressing my emotions, in spite of being a supposedly hot-blooded Latin. Along with some other friends and colleagues, I have recently contributed to the Special Issue of PAID honoring the Phil's contributions to science, and see no need to repeat that all here. For now, I will do my best to honor Phil on a more personal level. Aside from being a great thinker and scientist, Phil was my dear friend. We spoke as often as we could, and I was lucky enough to have gotten to travel through Europe with him several times, usually after one conference or another that we had both just attended. We got to tour and discuss at length some of the greatest works of our civilization, from the glories of the Golden Age of Spain to the magnificence of the Italian Renaissance. I will always remember our far-ranging conversations on the history of our culture and its evolutionary significance, over the endless cups of cappuccino that he would want to stop for nearly every hour if we happened to pass by any cafes that sold it (which were virtually everywhere in places like Spain and Italy!) He was a kind person, completely approachable, and always a gentleman. In fact, in spite of all the vicious slander directed at him (and, most outrageously, which even continues after his passing), he was one of the most fundamentally decent human beings that I have ever met. The world will miss Professor Phil Rushton, the scientist. I will miss my friend Phil.