Abstract

Apart from the treatment of aesthetic and teleological judgment in a single work, perhaps the strangest feature of the Critique of Judgment, at least to the post-Hegelian reader for whom “aesthetics” and “philosophy of art” are virtual synonyms, is the fact that it is only near the very end of the portion dealing with aesthetic judgment (§43 to be exact) that Kant turns to the topic of fine art. To be sure, we do not find here the first reference to art and artistic beauty. On the contrary, we have seen that references to them are scattered throughout the Analytic of the Beautiful and the Deduction. And we have also seen that in the sections lying between the Deduction and the discussion of fine art, Kant argues that only natural and not artistic beauty is capable of being connected with an intellectual, morally based interest. Nevertheless, as has been frequently noted in the literature, the whole discussion of fine art and its connection with genius has an episodic character about it that makes it difficult to integrate into the overall argument of the work.

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