Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/35885
Title: Actions and bodily movements
Authors: Friggieri, Joe
Keywords: Philosophy and religion
Consequentialism (Ethics)
Philosophy, Modern
Issue Date: 1987
Publisher: University of Malta. Faculty of Theology
Citation: Friggieri, J. (1987). Actions and bodily movements. Melita Theologica, 38(2), 88-93.
Abstract: In my last contribution to this review I showed why it was necessary to distinguish between particular actions and action-kinds. Failure to make this distinction, I argued, generates misunderstanding. One thesis which can lead to a great deal of perplexity, precisely on account of such failure, is Davidson's claim that actions are bodily movements. We can react to such a claim in different ways. We may say: "This cannot be a claim about all actions," and mention cases where it doesn't apply. I can carry out long sums in my head, stand to attention when told to, allow you to pass, decide to read a book tomorrow, lie perfectly motionless in bed. In all these cases I may be said to be engaged in some kind of action or activity, though my body can remain quite still.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/35885
Appears in Collections:MT - Volume 38, Issue 2 - 1987
MT - Volume 38, Issue 2 - 1987

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