Henry E. AllisonKant's Theory of Taste
A Reading of the Critique of Aesthetic Judgment
Herausgeber: Pippin, Robert B.
Acknowledgments
Note on sources and key to abbreviations and translations
Introduction
Part I. Kant's Conception of Reflective Judgment: 1. Reflective judgment and the purposiveness of nature
2. Reflection and taste in the introductions
Part II. Te Quid Facti and the Quid Juris in the Domain of Taste: 3. The analytic of the beautiful and the quid facti: an overview
4. The disinterestedness of the pure judgment of taste
5. Subjective universality, the universal voice, and the harmony of the faculties
6. Beauty, purposiveness, and form
7. The modality of taste and the sensus communis
8. The deduction of pure judgments of taste
Part III. The Moral and Systematic Significance of Taste: 9. Reflective judgment and the transition from nature to freedom
10. Beauty, duty, and interest: the moral significance of natural beauty
11. The antinomy of taste and beauty as a symbol of morality
Part IV. Parerga to the Theory of Taste: 12. Fine art and genius
13. The sublime
Notes
Bibliography
Index.