This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

§ 47. Clarification and confirmation of the above explanation of Genius . . . 190
§ 48. On the relation of Genius to Taste . . . 193
§ 49. On the mental faculties that constitute Genius . . . 197
§ 50. On the combination of Taste with Genius in the products of Fine Art original: "beautiful Art" . . . 205
§ 51. On the division of the fine arts . . . 206
§ 52. On the combination of fine arts in one and the same product . . . 214
§ 53. Comparison of the respective aesthetic worth of the fine arts . . . 215
§ 54. Remark . . . 220
Second Division.—Dialectic The branch of logic that investigates the truth of opinions through logical disputation or the resolution of contradictions. of Aesthetic Judgment . . . 229
§ 55. . . . . . . 229
§ 56. Presentation of the antinomy A contradiction between two laws or principles that both seem equally logical. of Taste . . . 230
§ 57. Solution of the antinomy of Taste . . . 231
§ 58. On the Idealism of the purposiveness The quality of appearing to have been designed for a purpose. of both Nature and Art as the unique principle of aesthetic Judgment . . . 241
§ 59. On Beauty as the symbol of Morality . . . 248
§ 60. Appendix:—On the method of Taste . . . 253
§ 61. On the objective purposiveness of Nature . . . 259
First Division.—Analytic of Teleological Judgment . . . 262
§ 62. On objective purposiveness which is merely formal as distinguished from that which is material . . . 262
§ 63. On relative purposiveness, as distinguished from the inner purposiveness of nature . . . 268
§ 64. On the peculiar character of things as natural purposes . . . 272
§ 65. Things regarded as natural purposes are organized beings . . . 275
§ 66. On the principle of judging internal purposiveness in organized beings . . . 280
§ 67. On the principle of the teleological judging of nature in general as a system of purposes . . . 282
§ 68. On the principle of Teleology as an internal principle of natural science . . . 287