 Well, I think it is very important, because if I cite Armin Gerz, he says that our minds are encultured and embroidered. Talking as a historian, I must say that most of my colleagues took it for granted that we are encultured, but have many problems with us being embroidered. They are just not ready to think about human beings as physical beings. And therefore this interaction with people who treat mind as part of the body is very fruitful and gives quite a different and, in my opinion, very interesting approach to history. Learning from different disciplines, in my opinion, is one of the best ways to do something new with your materials, because classical studies is a field which is very well studied. And I get insights and inspiration, sometimes from fields far away from mind, say from prehistoric archaeology, from psychology. And it is talking to people and then reading things those people have worked on that gives sometimes ideas of doing things about my own materials. A lot of them, and in fact what I must say that this workshop went much smoother and people understood each other really much better than your previous sessions or meetings. So this time it was particularly important to me since I learned a lot from the way psychologists or people who do experimental research look at the phenomena. I studied, for instance, prophecy and sensory deprivation. All this stuff will be of great importance for me.