| Immanuel Kant - 1892 - 486 Seiten
...without attaching itself to one of them. EXPLANATION OF THE BEAUTIFUL RESULTING FROM THE FIRST MOMENT Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful}SECOND MOMENT OF THE JUDGMENT OF TASTE, VIZ., ACCORDING... | |
| Immanuel Kant - 1892 - 492 Seiten
...without attaching itself to one of them. EXPLANATION OF THE BEAUTIFUL RESULTING FROM THE FIRST MOMENT Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...method of representing it by an entirely disinterested I satisfaction or dissatisfaction.- The object of such ) \ satisfaction is called beautiful? SECOND... | |
| Albert Hofstadter, Richard Kuhns - 2009 - 730 Seiten
...judgment about the object no longer free. Explanation of the Beautiful Resulting from the First Moment Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful. SECOND MOMENT Of the Judgment of Taste, According... | |
| Stephen David Ross - 1984 - 590 Seiten
...without attaching itself to one of them. Explanation of the Beautiful Resulting from the First Moment Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful. 8 Second Moment Of the Judgment of Taste, According... | |
| Vinayak Purohit - 1988 - 656 Seiten
...from the Hegelian and Marxist Moments) under which Kant examines art are as follows: ,j 1. As Quality: "Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful."29 2. As Quantity: "The beautiful is that which... | |
| Jack L. Nasar - 1992 - 564 Seiten
...and free satisfaction; for no interest, either of sense or of reason, here forces our assent. . . . Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful. (First Moment, 35). Although there is much in... | |
| Margaret A. Rose - 1988 - 234 Seiten
...Following his introduction to this ethical moment Kant had then described taste as 'the faculty of judging an object or a method of representing it by an entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction'. Predictably Kant was (like Hegel after him) also to make a distinction between art and handicraft (the... | |
| Hilde Hein, Carolyn C. Korsmeyer - 1993 - 272 Seiten
...two introductions to the third Critique and at the end of the first moment, where he defines taste as "the faculty of judging of an object or a method of...representing it by an entirely disinterested satisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful."9 Since taste, for Kant, is not directly concerned... | |
| Wilhelm Dilthey - 1985 - 414 Seiten
...this representation." "The satisfaction which determines the judgment of taste is disinterested."56 "Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful."*7 Since 119 there is no conceptual transition... | |
| Stephen David Ross - 1996 - 372 Seiten
...among its most persuasive exemplars. In Kant's words, expressed in the first moment of the beautiful: "Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a...entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful" (Kant, CJ, § 45, 45; Ross, AIS, 103). In Builough's... | |
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