Massive neutrinos were the first proposed, and remain the most natural, particle candidate for the dark matter. In the absence of firm laboratory evidence for neutrino mass, considerations of the formation of large scale structure in the universe provide a sensitive, albeit indirect, probe of this possibility. Observations of galaxy clustering and large angle anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background have been interpreted as requiring that neutrinos provide about 20% of the critical density. However the need for such `hot' dark matter is removed if the primordial spectrum of density fluctuations is tilted below scale-invariance, as is often the case in physically realistic inflationary models. This question will be resolved by forthcomi...