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Kant's Critique of Taste
The Feeling of Life
This book explores Kant's compelling vision of our aesthetic and cognitive lives as anchored in experiences of attunement and animation.
Katalin Makkai (Author)
9781108497794, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 15 April 2021
210 pages, 16 b/w illus.
23.5 x 16 x 2 cm, 0.46 kg
'Essential.' J. G. Moore, Choice Magazine
Immanuel Kant's Critique of Judgment is widely recognized as a founding document of modern aesthetics, but its legacy has fallen into disrepute. In this book Katalin Makkai calls for the rediscovery of Kant's aesthetics, showing that its centerpiece, his investigation of the judgment of taste, paints a compelling portrait of our relationships with works of art that we love. At its heart is a scene of aesthetic encounter in which one feels oneself to be 'animated' - brought to life - by an object, finding there to be something in one's experience of it, beyond what there is to know about it, that one wants to explore and articulate. Tracing Kant's insight that to judge is to reveal one's sense of what bears judging, and hence of what matters, Makkai situates Kant's aesthetics within his larger study, begun in the first Critique, of judgment's fundamental role in the life of the mind.
Introduction: a twofold peculiarity
1. The art of judgment
2. Communication and animation in the judgment of taste
3. Subjectivity and recognition in the judgment of taste
4. Modes of attunement
5. Aesthetic liking.
Subject Areas: Philosophy: aesthetics [HPN], Philosophy [HP], Humanities [H]
