Abstract
This chapter examines what constitutes an “action” and then focuses on simple actions that provide insight into the complex overt and covert processes required to generate them. It considers the contrast between non‐conscious, automatic actions and conscious, controlled ones and analyses the components of controlled actions that are accessible or inaccessible to consciousness. On the basis of experimental and clinical evidence the chapter then develops a model of the neurophysiological processes involved in action recognition and concludes with an evaluation of conscious agency being, in some respects, “an illusion”.