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    Leibniz's doctrine of confused cognition, which Baumgarte... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The experience of beauty is an awareness of the object's effect on our representational faculty, not an awareness of the cause of that effect in the object itself.

    Leibniz's doctrine of confused cognition, which Baumgarten inherits, holds that confused representations are still representations of objective features, not mere self-referential states.

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    Key Terms

    Baumgarten(as the historical figure referenced in the statement)
    An 18th-century German philosopher who created the field of aesthetics—the philosophical study of beauty and art. He argued that beauty isn't just a matter of opinion, but connects to real, objective qualities in things.
    Leibniz
    Leibniz is a German philosopher and mathematician from the 1600s-1700s who developed calculus (a powerful math tool for measuring change and areas) independently around the same time as Isaac Newton. He's famous for creating much of the notation we still use in mathematics today and for arguing that everything in the universe follows logical principles. His ideas profoundly influenced modern science, mathematics, and philosophy, making him one of history's most important thinkers.
    Representations(as used in epistemology and philosophy of mind)
    Mental images, ideas, or thoughts that stand in for things in the world—essentially, how your mind depicts or understands reality.
    confused cognition(This is Leibniz's term for a specific kind of mental experience)

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    A type of thinking or knowing that isn't crystal clear or fully detailed—like having a fuzzy, incomplete picture of something rather than seeing all the details sharply.
    objective features(The debate is whether confused thoughts still accurately represent these real features)
    Real characteristics or properties of things that exist independently—not just in someone's imagination or feelings about them.
    self-referential states(Leibniz argues that even confused thoughts refer to real things, not just your own mental states)
    Mental experiences that only point back to themselves or your own mind, rather than connecting to anything outside your mind.

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    Perception1 linkedAesthetics1 linked

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    The experience of beauty is an awareness of the object's effect on our represent...

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