4. Process and Action: Whitehead’s Ontological Units and Perceptuomotor Control Units JONATHAN T. DELAFIELD-BUTT “Motion in the most general sense, conceived as the mode of existence, the inherent attribute of matter, comprehends all changes and processes occurring in the universe, from mere change of place right to thinking.” Friedrich Engels, Dialectics of Nature, 1888 Introduction Movement lies at the heart of matter; all matter is always moving, in many different modes. Matter organised in the form of living cells and animals does something peculiar, however. Its collective movements are purposeful and goal-oriented, geared for the appropriation of an immediate future and generally for the preservation of its existence. The organisation of the movement of matter lies at the heart of living: from the organised biochemical activity within small compartments of cells, to the movements and activities of cells and cell systems, to the gross body movements of large multicellular organisms like you and I. All of life is the organised movement of matter. Living organisation enacts purposeful behaviours that sustain the existence of the living thing, a feature that I will show here fundamentally requires prospective control to anticipate the future present. How an organism senses and moves prospectively purposefully within its environment is an essential question for the emerging “systems” sciences, and is the theme for this paper. I will present two separate streams of thought that are closely analogous. The first is the process metaphysics of Whitehead’s “actual Delafield-Butt, J. T. (2014). Process and Action: Whitehead's Ontological Units and Perceptuomotor Control Units. In S. Koutroufinis (Ed.), Life and Process (pp. 133-156). Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter Ontos.