nings and qualities into the cup. Example: I see a large yellow cup. Immediately I interpret it as a cup suitable for morning tea, not only a cup suitable for putting liquids in. Not to mention what the design tells me. We make interpretations from the first second we come in contact with anything. This is something one might call imaginative interpretation, we search for connections with our previous encounters of something similar, features that remind us about something we saw or heard before. But it is not as simple as we see something that we saw before, the connections made would be impossible to reproduce with a computer or sure logic, it is a creative process that involves a lot of guessing and assuming, this is where the mistakes and strokes of genius arise. Through this method we build our world of experience, it is a mixture of "reality", memories and imagination.This is just to point out that maybe things are not as simple as one (meaning firstly me) might think. As in maybe language is not the starting point of this untruthful behaviour that I am going to describe, but maybe it originates from somewhere even deeper (I will return to this thought later).3.0 Social interactionA man walks down the street. It is a street that curves slightly to his right, but enough that you cannot see what lies after two blocks. He is going to a cafeteria, which is located at the end of the road. A young female walks to the opposite direction. Their paths cross. The man says: "I'm going to Joe's caf, does this road take me there?" The woman answers, with a soft voice: "Yes. You are going the right way. You just have to walk straight through the upcoming park, past the three bus stops, go right along to the first of the jugend houses, walk past it and it should come along shortly to your left hand side". The man looks, says "thank you", turns around and walks right back to where he came from. This was just an example how a very simple act of co...