The so-called culture of a group of human beings, as it is treated by the cultural anthropologist, is essentially a systematic list of all the socially inherited pattern of behavior which may be illustrated in the actual behavior of all or most of the individuals of the group. The true locus of these processes which, when abstracted into a totality, constitute culture is not society, for the term “society” is itself a cultural construct which is employed by individuals who stand in significant relations to each other in order to help them in the interpretation of certain aspects of their behavior. The true locus of culture is in the interactions of specific individuals and, on the subjective side, in the world of meanings which each one of these individuals may unconsciously abstract for himself from his participation in these interactions. Every individual is, then a representative of at least one sub-culture. Frequently, he is a representative of more than one sub-culture, and the degree to which the socialized behavior of any given individual can be abstracted from the generalized culture of a single group varies enormously from person to person.