The verb to thact, an exercise in more scientific language.
Thact is a new word as far as I know that is part of a project to jettison inadequate yet still hugely influential philosophical (anti-scientific) practices that distort our understanding by separating thinking and doing as though we have a mind that can function by disconnecting itself from our bodies upon which it can then sit in judgement. Such ideas go back to the ancients such as Plato who believed in pure thought as the true reality, the body being something perishable and therefore less real, i.e., less true. The separation of thinking and body is reinforced in the modern era by Descartes who believed that human identity was defined by our ability for pure thought (pure mathematics par example) untainted by sensory experience. If we take a scientific approach and abandon these specious but still dominant models of human functioning which portray people as some sort of automaton, we can talk of a process of thactivity where actions and thought are linked as interdependent processes. People don’t think or act they thact. Such a conclusion is not absolutely true, it just a more realistic, scientific answer.