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Dialectic of human acts and human acts

 Dialectic of human acts and human acts 

According to Ricardo Soda and Afonso Monroy, human acts are only those that come from the deliberate will of man, that is, those that man practices with knowledge and with free will. In them, first the understanding intervenes, man knows and decides whether he can and should tend towards him or not. 

Once the object is known, the will tends either because it desires it, or it turns away from it by rejecting it. As I define it as: Human action is when man changes reality, consciously and voluntarily, that is, when he performs the action with knowledge of his intention and what he performs. Distinguishing human acts from human acts was also an approach that raised some questions for me. After doing a lot of research I got the following results. Human action as defining man. Man is defined by the way he chooses, decides and executes different actions. Each man individualizes himself in this process.

Through man's actions, reality is transformed. In the course of events there is an intervention, in this way man becomes an agent of change, his actions project him into the future. Events and acts called human are those specific to man, those that are inherent to his nature. 

Man performs two types of acts: those common to other animals, and those that he alone performs. 

Events are what we do without intention or will. Basically, it is everything that happens without the will of the agent or of Man in general, contextualized in time and space. Actions are everything we do with intention, will and we can explain them. All actions must be conscious, voluntary and intentional. We can also classify them as voluntary or involuntary: Involuntary acts (or acts of man) These are acts that did not imply any intention on the part of the subject. 

These are events in which we limit them to being less receptors of effects that we do not provoke. There are acts that we perform by mere instinctive reflex, we do them without thinking. They constitute reflexive and spontaneous behaviors or even automated and reactive behaviors, which we carry out accidentally due to a succession of causes that are completely outside of us and that we do not control. Examples of these acts are chewing, snoring, reaching out in self-defense, getting old, screaming with fright… Breathing is an action that we constantly perform in an involuntary way, since we don't even think now I'm going to decide to breathe. Pedro Freire (2010:46).

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