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Single Idea 20408

[filed under theme 21. Aesthetics / A. Aesthetic Experience / 3. Taste ]

Full Idea

With regard to the agreeable, the principle Everyone has his own taste (of the senses) is valid.

Gist of Idea

With respect to the senses, taste is an entirely personal matter

Source

Immanuel Kant (Critique of Judgement I: Aesthetic [1790], CUP 7 5:212), quoted by Elizabeth Schellekens - Immanuel Kant (aesthetics) 1

Book Ref

'Key Thinkers in Aesthetics', ed/tr. Giovannelli,Alessandro [Continuum 2012], p.63


A Reaction

This is a preliminary concession, and he goes on to defend more objective views of taste.

Related Idea

Idea 20409 When we judge beauty, it isn't just personal; we judge on behalf of everybody [Kant]


The 13 ideas from 'Critique of Judgement I: Aesthetic'

Kant gave form and status to aesthetics, and Hegel gave it content [Kant, by Scruton]
The aesthetic attitude is a matter of disinterestedness [Kant, by Wollheim]
Only rational beings can experience beauty [Kant, by Scruton]
The beautiful is not conceptualised as moral, but it symbolises or resembles goodness [Kant, by Murdoch]
Kant saw beauty as a sort of disinterested pleasure, which has become separate from the good [Kant, by Taylor,C]
The mathematical sublime is immeasurable greatness; the dynamical sublime is overpowering [Kant, by Pinkard]
Aesthetic values are not objectively valid, but we must treat them as if they are [Kant, by Scruton]
The sublime is a moral experience [Kant, by Gardner]
The judgement of beauty is not cognitive, but relates, via imagination, to pleasurable feelings [Kant]
Beauty is only judged in pure contemplation, and not with something else at stake [Kant]
With respect to the senses, taste is an entirely personal matter [Kant]
When we judge beauty, it isn't just personal; we judge on behalf of everybody [Kant]
Saying everyone has their own taste destroys the very idea of taste [Kant]