Description

Book Synopsis

This book analyzes how the public character of judgments of taste makes implicit statements in moral and political philosophy. The framework that relates aesthetic, moral, and political aspects into such a triadic relationship is an implicit conception of freedom. In «The Critique of Judgment» Kant elaborates the idea that judgments of taste can only exist where society exists. The author regards Friedrich Schiller’s and Hannah Arendt’s approaches on the normative resources of Kant’s aesthetics for moral and political thought. He evaluates the discovery of the presence of a constant feature of Kant’s conception of freedom in both his aesthetic and moral theory: freedom as autonomy.



Table of Contents

Disinterestedness – Public – Public sphere – Autonomy – Freedom – Judging – Taste – Morality – Politics – The epistemology of autonomy – Disinterested delight as interest – The moral burden of cognition: Arendt’s political reasoning – The inherent freedom of individual judgments of taste – Taste and politics – Moral character as the final framework of judgments of taste

Hannah Arendt and Friedrich Schiller on Kant’s

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    A Hardback by Mihály Szilágyi-Gál

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      View other formats and editions of Hannah Arendt and Friedrich Schiller on Kant’s by Mihály Szilágyi-Gál

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 26/04/2017
      ISBN13: 9783631720202, 978-3631720202
      ISBN10: 3631720203

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book analyzes how the public character of judgments of taste makes implicit statements in moral and political philosophy. The framework that relates aesthetic, moral, and political aspects into such a triadic relationship is an implicit conception of freedom. In «The Critique of Judgment» Kant elaborates the idea that judgments of taste can only exist where society exists. The author regards Friedrich Schiller’s and Hannah Arendt’s approaches on the normative resources of Kant’s aesthetics for moral and political thought. He evaluates the discovery of the presence of a constant feature of Kant’s conception of freedom in both his aesthetic and moral theory: freedom as autonomy.



      Table of Contents

      Disinterestedness – Public – Public sphere – Autonomy – Freedom – Judging – Taste – Morality – Politics – The epistemology of autonomy – Disinterested delight as interest – The moral burden of cognition: Arendt’s political reasoning – The inherent freedom of individual judgments of taste – Taste and politics – Moral character as the final framework of judgments of taste

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