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    Kant restricted pure judgments of taste to form alone to ... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Kant's restriction of pure judgments of taste to form alone constitutes an implicit criticism of Herz's theory

    Kant restricted pure judgments of taste to form alone to guarantee unanimity rather than accepting variation

    Aesthetics
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    Aesthetics

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    Immanuel KantmodernLatin dissertation
    Marcus HerzmodernConsiderations from Speculative Philosophy

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    Moses Mendelssohn
    modern

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    Herz accepted variation in taste as compatible with the objectivity of beauty by...Kant's restriction of pure judgments of taste to form alone constitutes an impli...These two positions are incompatible on the question of whether variation in tas...

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    Pure judgments of taste are restricted to form alone88%Pure judgments of taste can guarantee unanimity across individuals87%Kant's restriction of pure judgments of taste to form alone constitute...85%A purely aesthetic judgment of taste involves no concept and yields on...81%

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    SEP: aesthetics-18th-german
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    Herz’s Considerations from Speculative Philosophy, published at the age of twenty-four, does not purport to be more than a German paraphrase of Kant’s Latin dissertation, but it goes beyond Kant’s published work on a number of points in the treatment of space, time, and things in themselves. It also adds a Mendelssohnian argument about the simplicity of the soul, and, most surprisingly, includes a digression on aesthetic judgment that anticipates a central argument of his subsequent Essay on Tas

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