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2 lip 2005 · Kant’s views on aesthetics and teleology are most fully presented in his Critique of Judgment (Kritik der Urteilskraft, now often translated Critique of the Power of Judgment), published in 1790. This work is in two parts, preceded by a long introduction in which Kant explains and defends the work’s importance to his critical system overall.
- Kant’s Theory of Judgment
1. The Nature of Judgment. Theories of cognitive judgment...
- Aesthetic Judgment
In the first part of this essay, we will look at the...
- Kant’s Philosophy of Science
Kant’s philosophy of science has received attention from...
- Kant's Critique of Metaphysics
1. Preliminary Remarks: The Rejection of Ontology (general...
- Kant's Aesthetics and Teleology
While part of Kant's point here is to contrast aesthetic and...
- Kant’s Theory of Judgment
Immanuel Kant: Aesthetics. Immanuel Kant is an 18th century German philosopher whose work initated dramatic changes in the fields of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and teleology. Like many Enlightenment thinkers, he holds our mental faculty of reason in high esteem; he believes that it is our reason that invests the world we ...
2 lip 2005 · While part of Kant's point here is to contrast aesthetic and rational ideas, it is clear that he sees the role of aesthetic ideas as mediating between rational ideas on the one hand, and sensibility and imagination on the other.
24 wrz 2020 · It discusses Kant’s aesthetics and teleology in their own right and in connection to Kant’s moral philosophy. Originally published in 2006 but with a revised interpretation of Kant’s key concept of “humanity” in the second edition.
27 maj 2009 · In this article I will limit myself to this critical aesthetics of Kant. But I will also discuss the ugly and the possibility of beauty in mathematics and see whether Kant's theory can successfully explain or deal with them.
In this article I will limit myself to this critical aesthetics of Kant. But I will also discuss the ugly and the possibility of beauty in mathematics and see whether Kant's theory can ...
Kant's aesthetic revolution, continuous with what he called' his Copernican revolution in thought, has to do with his effort to think freedom. Like every great thinker he is concerned eventually with the problem of the freedom of the individual in relation to his membership in the free social whole. Kant is con-