Kant's Aesthetics: The Roles of Form and Expression |
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic appreciation Aesthetic Judgement Analytic categorical imperative Cerf chapter Claims of Taste cognitive faculties common sense connection between free Crawford Critique of Aesthetic Critique of Judgment Deduction demanding agreement distinction early sections empirical epistemological experience express aesthetic Ideas expression of aesthetic expression of Ideas feeling of pleasure formalist free harmony further Guyer harmony and pleasure Ideas of Reason imagination imperatival intellectual interest interest in beauty interpretation judgments of taste justification of judgments justify Kant argues Kant claims Kant holds Kant's Aesthetic Theory Kant's argument Kant's position legitimately demand manifold mental Meredith moral interest moral law nature paragraph 21 passage Paul Guyer perceptual formalism pleasure of taste priori principle rational expectation rational interest reflective judging reflective judgment representation requires second Critique sharable simple reflection sort source of pleasure subjectively purposive synthetic a priori take pleasure theory of expression third Critique understanding universal pleasure universal validity universalizability universally communicable