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Mentioned in 1 episodes
Critique of judgment
Book • 1790
The Critique of Judgment is the third critique in Kant's Critical project, following the Critique of Pure Reason and the Critique of Practical Reason.
The book is divided into two main sections: the Critique of Aesthetic Judgment and the Critique of Teleological Judgment.
Kant discusses the four moments of the 'Judgement of Taste' and the aesthetic reflective judgments of the agreeable, the beautiful, the sublime, and the good.
He also explores the teleological judgment, arguing that our determinations of purpose in nature are intersubjective judgments.
The work lays the foundation for modern aesthetics and addresses the relationship between human perception, beauty, and the natural world.
The book is divided into two main sections: the Critique of Aesthetic Judgment and the Critique of Teleological Judgment.
Kant discusses the four moments of the 'Judgement of Taste' and the aesthetic reflective judgments of the agreeable, the beautiful, the sublime, and the good.
He also explores the teleological judgment, arguing that our determinations of purpose in nature are intersubjective judgments.
The work lays the foundation for modern aesthetics and addresses the relationship between human perception, beauty, and the natural world.
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Mentioned in 1 episodes
Mentioned in the context of discussing Kant's ideas on the organic world and purposefulness in nature.

131 snips
The Cosmos Is Made of Consciousness | Matthew Segall
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as one of the critiques that he covered on his channel.

David Guignion

Immanuel Kant's "Prolegomena to any Future Metaphysics"
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in the context of a discussion on beauty, goodness, and truth, and their order in evangelization.

Fr. Bonaventure Chapman

Guestsplaining: Johannes Hartl on Humanity & Beauty
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as a work that is a tour de force.

Alex Pri

Samuel Stoner on Kant’s Conjectural Beginnings and the Story of Genesis