1. Although social arrangements constrain and control us, they are still constructed and reproduced by human action.
2. Another distinction between human and animal behaviour is that considerations of motive are appropriate to the assessment of human action.
3. Both motivation and emotion will be analysed as processes concerned with the control of human action.
4. The universally-shared human motive of rational self-interest makes human action predictable, generalisable and controllable.
5. ...the unintended consequences of human action.
6. One vital role of science fiction is to show what kinds of future might result from certain kinds of human actions.
7. Others may deal with motivation, causation or the consequences of human actions.
8. And judging by the pictures, which include vignettes of animals engaged in human actions naughty and nice, the news is by no means always good.
9. Around the world, the story of coral reefs is a story of human actions causing dire consequences often long distances from the scene.
10. As a result, tracing changes directly to human actions has proved difficult.