The system of occasional causes; -- a name given to certain theories of the Cartesian school of philosophers, as to the intervention of the First Cause, by which they account for the apparent reciprocal action of the soul and the body.
Mutual or reciprocal action or influence; as, the interaction of the heart and lungs on each other.
Reciprocal action is a higher relation than causality, because there is no pure causality.
We leave the province of essence with the category of reciprocal action.
This determination is reciprocal determination, or reciprocal action.
Substance appears as the persistence of the real in time; causality as regular succession in time; reciprocal action as the regular coetaneousness of the determinations in the one substance, with the determinations in the other.
We therefore repeat our proposition, that War is an act of violence pushed to its utmost bounds; as one side dictates the law to the other, there arises a sort of reciprocal action, which logically must lead to an extreme.
They only pay regard to activity on one side, whilst War is a constant state of reciprocal action, the effects of which are mutual.
The third general method of expressing mutual or reciprocal action is by the use of some particular form of the verb.
There are also other words where the existence of two parties is essential to the idea conveyed, and where the notion, if not that of reciprocal action, is akin to it; viz.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "reciprocal action" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.