
audiobook
This volume presents Immanuel Kant’s pivotal investigation into the faculty of judgment, the bridge that links our powers of understanding with the realm of reason. In the first sections, Kant asks how we can legitimately form judgments about nature, art, and purposiveness without relying on empirical rules, laying out a rigorous framework of a‑priori principles that govern both the beautiful and the functional. He distinguishes between determinate concepts that dictate strict laws and regulative ideas that guide our inquiry, showing how judgment operates as a mediating faculty in the architecture of human cognition.
Readers are guided through Kant’s careful analysis of aesthetic experience, where the feeling of pleasure and the notion of purposiveness converge, as well as his treatment of teleological judgment in the natural sciences. By the end of the opening act, the work has established the essential questions and methodological tools that will shape the later discussion of the sublime, the universality of taste, and the limits of reason. The text invites anyone fascinated by philosophy to follow Kant’s systematic yet profoundly human exploration of how we comprehend and appreciate the world.
Language
de
Duration
~14 hours (862K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jana Srna, Norbert H. Langkau and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2017-11-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1724–1804
A quiet professor from Königsberg became one of the most influential thinkers in Western philosophy, asking how we know what we know and what makes an action truly moral. His ideas still shape debates about reason, freedom, duty, and the limits of human understanding.
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