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    Pleasure in a beautiful object occurs independently of th... — Carmelics
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    Supports→A judgment of taste — claiming an object is beautiful — is independent of any interest in the object's existence as physiologically agreeable or as good for some purpose.

    Pleasure in a beautiful object occurs independently of the object satisfying a determinate concept of utility or morality.

    Aesthetics
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    Aesthetics

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    A judgment of taste — claiming an object is beautiful — is independent of any in...Pleasure in a beautiful object occurs independently of the object being physiolo...

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    SEP: aesthetics-18th-german
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    Starting from the claim that Francis Hutcheson had made in 1725 and Mendelssohn reintroduced in 1785, Kant begins his analysis of the judgment of taste, that is, our claim that a particular object is beautiful, from the premise that our pleasure in a beautiful object occurs independently of any interest in the existence of the object as physiologically agreeable (CPJ, §3, 5:205–7) or as good for some purpose expressed by a determinate concept of utility or morality (CPJ, §4, 5:207–9). But neithe

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