THE CRITIQUE OF JUDGEMENT by Immanuel Kant

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Numbers Treasure Hunt Following each question, click on the answer. If correct, the next page will load with a graphic first – these can be used to check.
Advertisements

1
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1 Computer Systems Organization & Architecture Chapters 8-12 John D. Carpinelli.
Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Author: Julia Richards and R. Scott Hawley.
Author: Julia Richards and R. Scott Hawley
STATISTICS Random Variables and Distribution Functions
Properties Use, share, or modify this drill on mathematic properties. There is too much material for a single class, so you’ll have to select for your.
UNITED NATIONS Shipment Details Report – January 2006.
David Burdett May 11, 2004 Package Binding for WS CDL.
1 RA I Sub-Regional Training Seminar on CLIMAT&CLIMAT TEMP Reporting Casablanca, Morocco, 20 – 22 December 2005 Status of observing programmes in RA I.
Properties of Real Numbers CommutativeAssociativeDistributive Identity + × Inverse + ×
1 Click here to End Presentation Software: Installation and Updates Internet Download CD release NACIS Updates.
REVIEW: Arthropod ID. 1. Name the subphylum. 2. Name the subphylum. 3. Name the order.
Break Time Remaining 10:00.
Turing Machines.
Immanuel Kant ( ) Theory of Aesthetics
The analysis of the Beautiful (I)
Table 12.1: Cash Flows to a Cash and Carry Trading Strategy.
PP Test Review Sections 6-1 to 6-6
Bright Futures Guidelines Priorities and Screening Tables
Bellwork Do the following problem on a ½ sheet of paper and turn in.
CS 6143 COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE II SPRING 2014 ACM Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming, PPoPP, 2006 Panel Presentations Parallel Processing is.
Exarte Bezoek aan de Mediacampus Bachelor in de grafische en digitale media April 2014.
VOORBLAD.
Copyright © 2012, Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 7 Modeling Structure with Blocks.
1 RA III - Regional Training Seminar on CLIMAT&CLIMAT TEMP Reporting Buenos Aires, Argentina, 25 – 27 October 2006 Status of observing programmes in RA.
Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge18/20/ Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge8/20/2014.
1..
CONTROL VISION Set-up. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 5 Step 4.
© 2012 National Heart Foundation of Australia. Slide 2.
Adding Up In Chunks.
1 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt Synthetic.
AS Religious Ethics Revision Deontology & Kant. DEONTOLOGICAL ETHICS based on the idea that an act’s claim to being right or wrong is independent of the.
H to shape fully developed personality to shape fully developed personality for successful application in life for successful.
1 hi at no doifpi me be go we of at be do go hi if me no of pi we Inorder Traversal Inorder traversal. n Visit the left subtree. n Visit the node. n Visit.
Analyzing Genes and Genomes
Prof.ir. Klaas H.J. Robers, 14 July Graduation: a process organised by YOU.
1 Let’s Recapitulate. 2 Regular Languages DFAs NFAs Regular Expressions Regular Grammars.
©Brooks/Cole, 2001 Chapter 12 Derived Types-- Enumerated, Structure and Union.
Essential Cell Biology
Exponents and Radicals
Intracellular Compartments and Transport
PSSA Preparation.
Essential Cell Biology
Kant Career Köningsberg in East-Prussia Professor at the University Lutheran rationalist The categorical imperative One of the most influential.
Immunobiology: The Immune System in Health & Disease Sixth Edition
Physics for Scientists & Engineers, 3rd Edition
Energy Generation in Mitochondria and Chlorplasts
Murach’s OS/390 and z/OS JCLChapter 16, Slide 1 © 2002, Mike Murach & Associates, Inc.
The Categorical Imperative
美的分析论 —— 《判断力批判》美者分析论第一、二契机 西方美学经典导读 —— 康德的美学思想 杜洁
Kant, Transcendental Aesthetic
Hume on Taste Hume's account of judgments of taste parallels his discussion of judgments or moral right and wrong.  Both accounts use the internal/external.
Parsing Categories of Belief Why Early Modern M&E divides belief into two types: Sensory & Mathematical.
Why a third Critique? Seminar “Kant: Critique of the Power of Judgment” University of Iceland Session 1 18/9/2007 Text: Preface Claus Beisbart.
Deontological & Consequential Ethics
Seminar “Kant: Critique of the Power of Judgment” University of Iceland Session 3 20/9/2007 Text: Introduction (III-IX) Claus Beisbart The Power of Judgment.
WHAT IS HIS DUTY? Duty - something that one is expected or required to do by moral or legal obligation. Your response:
Kant Deontology Categorical Imperative. Immanuel Kant Profile: Dead German Time of Berkley, Rousseau, Hume, Bentham Not a fan of music or arts.
1 Immanuel Kant ( ) Immanuel Kant’s analysis of aesthetic judgments is found in the first part of the third critique in the Critique of Judgment.
Seminar “Kant: Critique of the Power of Judgment” University of Iceland Session 7 2/10/2007 Text: Critique of the Aesthtical Power of Judgment (9-17) Claus.
Kant and the Role of Reason Two things fill me with constantly increasing admiration and awe, the longer and more earnestly I reflect on them: the starry.
Chapter 7: Ethics Morality and Practical Reason: Kant
Immanuel Kant Critique of Judgment 1790 Kant on the judgment of taste.
Immanuel Kant ( ).
History of Philosophy.
Kant’s Categorical Imperative - revision
A Failure of Recognition Pt. 2
Presentation transcript:

THE CRITIQUE OF JUDGEMENT by Immanuel Kant 1790

The 17C~18C continental philosophy 1) Social and cultural role shifted. The rising of middle class The invention of printing New taste not just for poetry and fiction but for comment and criticism

The 17C~18C continental philosophy 2) A striking different aesthetic ☆ Empiricist: (Locke) & Rationalist: (Descartes) ☆Experience of art and beauty are personal and matter of taste, so they need no correction. ☆To find the rule that would guide the practice. ☆Creativity became a value in itself.

Kant Immanuel Kant, 1724~1840 22 April 1724 --Kōnigsberg in East Prussia ( after 1945, Kaliningrad) 12 February 1804 (aged 79) --Kōnigsberg

Parents were pietistic. ( Immanuel ---God with us)以马内利 Kōnigsberg Kaliningrad Russian exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast St. Petersburg――Leningrad

Pietism (the Lutheran Church): individual religious, devotional sincerity, biblical study, practice.

Experience of Kant: the University of Königsberg 16(1740): student in University, studied science, mathematics, philosophy 31(1755): lecturer on logic, metaphysics, natural science, physical geography, mathematics. 46(1770): Professor of logic and metaphysics

His Mark: Kantianism, enlightenment philosophy His Major: Epistemology, Metaphysics, Ethics, Logic His Concept: Categorical imperative, Transcendental Idealism, Synthetic a priori, Noumenon, Sapere aude, Nebular hypothesis

Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing admiration and awe, the more often and steadily we reflect upon them: The starry heavens above me and the moral law within me. taken from the conclusion of Kant's Critique of Practical Reason

1781 the Critique of Pure Reason 1788 the Critique of Practical Reason 1790 the Critique of Judgment

《判断力批判》 宗白华译本(上卷宗白华,下卷韦卓民),商务印书馆 1964年 牟宗三 全译本台湾学生书局1992年 邓晓芒全译本 人民出版社2002年5月

FIRST PART CRITIQUE OF AESTHETIC JUDGEMENTSECTION I. ANALYTIC OF AESTHETIC JUDGEMENT.BOOK

Definition of the Beautiful drawn from the 4 Moments. The object of such a delight (apart from any interest ) is called beautiful. The beautiful is that which, apart from a concept, pleases universally. Beauty is the form of finality in an object, so far as perceived in it apart from the representation of an end. The beautiful is that which, apart from a concept, is cognized as object of a necessary delight.

I. Analytic of the Beautiful. FIRST MOMENT. Of the Judgement of Taste*: Moment of Quality.

1. The Judgment of Taste is Aesthetical 2. The Satisfaction which Determines the Judgment of Taste is Disinterested 3. The Satisfaction in the Pleasant (Agreeable ) Is Bound Up with Interest 4. The Satisfaction in the Good Is Bound Up with Interest

5. Comparison of the Three Specially Different Kinds of Satisfaction 6. The Beautiful Is That Which Apart from Concepts Is Represented as the Object Of a Universal Satisfaction

7. Comparison of the Beautiful with the Pleasant and the Good By Means of the Above Characteristic 8. The Universality of the Satisfaction Is Represented in a Judgment of Taste Only as Subjective 9. Investigation of the Question Whether in the Judgment of Taste the Feeling of Pleasure Precedes or Follows the Judging of the Object

1. The Judgment of Taste is Aesthetical to discern whether anything is beautiful or not Not by the understanding to the object for cognition(认知[including sense, but no emotion] but by the imagination (perhaps in conjunction with the understanding) to the subject and its feeling of pleasure or pain. Not cognitive, not logical, but aesthetical The determining ground is no other than subjective

2. The Satisfaction which Determines the Judgment of Taste is Disinterested Interest: the satisfaction which combine with the representation of the existence of an object. ☆Satisfaction ----desire ☆Beautiful: not depend on the existence of the thing, judge it by mere observation (intuition, reflection)

☆Judgment: Not depend on the existence of the object, But with the representation in myself. Not be in the least prejudiced in favor of the existence of the things, But be quite indifferent in this respect. ☆Pure disinterested satisfaction

3. The Satisfaction in the Pleasant Is Bound Up with Interest ☆pleasant: that which please the senses in sensation. Other pleasant sensation: agreeable, lovely, delightful, enjoyable, etc. ☆All the operation of our faculties must issue in the practical and unit in it as their goal. So, men could blame one another for stupidity and indiscretion, but never for baseness and wickedness. For each according to his own way of seeing things, seek one goal, that is gratification.

Describe something as pleasant express an interest in it Describe something as pleasant express an interest in it. Not mere assent, but inclination. ☆Two sensations Determination of the feeling of pleasure or pain // Representation of a thing Subjective sensation, Simply to the subject // Objective sensation, Object Pleasantness of meadow // the green color of meadow

4. The Satisfaction in the Good Is Bound Up with Interest Good: through the mere concept, by means of ration. The object of will.

THIRD MOMENT. Of Judgements of Taste: the relation of the Ends brought under Review in such Judgements.

THIRD: Moment the relation of the Ends SS 10. Finality in general. define the meaning of “an end” in transcendental terms An end is the object of a concept so far as this concept is regarded as the cause of the object (the real ground of its possibility); and the causality of a concept in respect of its object is finality (forma finalis).

The faculty of desire, so far as determinable only through concepts, i The faculty of desire, so far as determinable only through concepts, i.e., so as to act in conformity with the representation of an end, would be the Will. Finality, therefore, may exist apart from an end we may at least observe a finality of form, and trace it in objects-though by reflection only-without resting it on an end

SS 11. The sole foundation of the judgement of taste is the form of finality of an object (or mode of representing it). the subjective finality in the representation of an object exclusive of any end (objective or subjective) an object is given to us, so far as we are conscious of it as that which is alone capable of constituting the delight which, apart from any concept, we estimate as universally communicable, and so of forming the determining ground of the judgement of taste.

SS 12. The judgement of taste rests upon a priori grounds. × × × be feeling of pleasure or displeasure // utterly impossible // a causal relation freedom // cross the border of experience, a causality resting on a supersensible attribute of the subject merely contemplative, not bring about an interest in the object

SS 13. The pure judgement of taste is independent of charm and emotion. SS 14 Exemplification.

SS 15. The judgement of taste is entirely independent of the concept of perfection. a finality apart from an end ( wholly independent of the representation of the good) the judgement of taste is an aesthetic judgement, one resting on subjective grounds. No concept can be its determining ground…affords absolutely no (not even a confused) knowledge …refers the representation solely to the subject, and brings to our notice no quality of the object

SS 16. A judgement of taste by which an object is described as beautiful, under the condition of a definite concept, is not pure. free beauty (no concept of what the object should be// no intrinsic meaning; they represent nothing-no object under a definite concept) estimate of a free beauty //pure judgement of taste appendant beauty //presupposes a concept of the end that defines what the thing has to be, and consequently a concept of its perfection. appendant beauty //presupposes a concept of the end that defines what the thing has to be, and consequently a concept of its perfection. the judgement of taste in respect of the latter delight is made dependent upon the end involved in the former delight as a judgement of reason, and is thus placed under a restriction, then it is no longer a free and pure judgement of taste.

SS 17. Ideal of beauty. the ideal of the beautiful, only to be sought human figure

Definition of the Beautiful Derived from this Third Moment. Beauty is the form of finality in an object, so far as perceived in it apart from the representation of an end.*

FOURTH MOMENT. Of the Judgement of Taste: Moment of the Modality of the Delight in the Object.

SS 18. Nature of the modality in a judgement of taste. being such a necessity as is thought in an aesthetic judgement, it can only be termed exemplary (a necessity of the assent of all to a judgement regarded as exemplifying a universal rule incapable of formulation )

The judgement of taste exacts agreement from every one SS 19. The subjective necessity attributed to a judgement of taste is conditioned. The judgement of taste exacts agreement from every one We are suitors for agreement from every one else, because we are fortified with a ground common to all.

Therefore they must have a subjective principle SS 20. The condition of the necessity advanced by a judgement of taste is the idea of a common sense. Therefore they must have a subjective principle universal validity such a principle, however, could only be regarded as a common sense.

SS 21. Have we reason for presupposing a common sense? we assume a common sense as the necessary condition of the universal communicability of our knowledge

to justify judgements containing an "ought.“ SS 22. The necessity of the universal assent that is thought in a judgement of taste, is a subjective necessity which, under the presupposition of a common sense, is represented as objective. to justify judgements containing an "ought.“ The assertion is not that every one will fall in with our judgement, but rather that every one ought to agree with it. These are questions which as yet we are neither willing nor in a position to investigate. For the present we have only to resolve the faculty of taste into its elements, and to unite these ultimately in the idea of a common sense.

Definition of the Beautiful drawn from the Fourth Moment. The beautiful is that which, apart from a concept, is cognized as object of a necessary delight.

General Remark on the First Section of the Analytic. the concept of taste as a critical faculty by which an object is estimated in reference to the free conformity to law of the imagination. the imagination should be both free and of itself conformable to law

Definition of the Beautiful drawn from the 4 Moments. The object of such a delight (apart from any interest ) is called beautiful. The beautiful is that which, apart from a concept, pleases universally. Beauty is the form of finality in an object, so far as perceived in it apart from the representation of an end. The beautiful is that which, apart from a concept, is cognized as object of a necessary delight. Empiricism (pleasure)//Rationalism (universal reason) transcendent logical judgement // practical judgement sens(ibility)-universal