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The Demands of Taste in Kant's Aesthetics

by Brent Kalar

Book title

A penetrating study of Kant on his judgements of taste, natural beauty and fine art.

  • Imprint: Continuum
  • Series: Continuum Studies in Philosophy
  • Pub. date: 15 Oct 2006
  • ISBN: 9780826488909
192 Pages, hardcover World rights £70.00 Add to my Catalogue Add to my basket

Description

Typically philosophers have either viewed beauty as objective and judgments of beauty as universally valid, or else they have viewed beauty as subjective and regarded judgments of beauty as merely private preferences. Immanuel Kant is famous for his unique third path. Kant argues that beauty is subjective, but the judgment of taste about beauty is capable of universal validity. In his view, the beautiful is not a feature of objects themselves, but merely represents the way we respond to objects. Furthermore, the judgment of taste about beauty is a merely 'aesthetic' judgment - i.e., one based on a feeling of pleasure we take in the object. The judgment of taste, on the other hand, possesses 'universal validity': to call something beautiful is implicitly to 'demand' that all others find it beautiful as well.
Kant's views about the taste for the beautiful have long been the subject of controversy. Scholars have differed over the interpretation of the demand contained in a judgment of taste and whether Kant's attempt to legitimate this demand is successful. Brent Kalar argues that the demands of taste should be understood as involving a uniquely aesthetic normativity rooted in Kant's cognitive psychology. If the basis of aesthetic pleasure in the activity of the cognitive faculties is properly understood, then Kant's attempt to legitimate the demands of taste may be regarded as a success. This leads Kalar to give a new interpretation of the nature of the beautiful according to Kant that re-examines the relationship between 'free play' and the 'form of purposiveness' in Kant's aesthetics, and restores the 'aesthetic ideas' to their rightful centrality in Kant's theory.

Table of Contents

Introduction
I. What is Implied in a Judgment of Taste?
II. The Problem of Free Play
III. The Problem of the Form of Purposiveness
IV. Beauty and Aesthetic Ideas
V. Pleasure and Justification
Bibliography

Author(s)

Brent Kalar, Brent Kalar received his PhD from Harvard University (Adams Prize, 2003), and is now Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of New Mexico, USA. 

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