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Beauty, Disinterested Pleasure, and Universal Communicability: Kant’s Response to Burke

  • Bart Vandenabeele
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 31. Oktober 2012
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Abstract

Although Kant (wrongly) holds that the universal communicability of aesthetic judgments logically follows from the disinterested character of the pleasure upon which they are based, Kant’s emphasis on the a priori validity of judgments of beauty can be viewed as a rebuttal of the kind of empiricist arguments that Burke offers to justify the social nature of the experience of beauty. I argue that the requirement of universal communicability is not a mere addition to the requirement of universal validity and is far more relevant to an adequate characterisation of the beautiful than has customarily been assumed. I further argue that the ‘exemplary necessity’ of pure judgments of taste, if understood correctly, reveals beauty’s primordial social significance, enabling us to become alive to a profound universal solidarity among aesthetic subjects.

Published Online: 2012-10-31
Published in Print: 2012-07-01

© 2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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