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This book analyzes how the public character of judgments of taste
makes implicit statements in moral and political philosophy. The
framework that relates aesthetic, moral, and political aspects into
such a triadic relationship is an implicit conception of freedom.
In "The Critique of Judgment" Kant elaborates the idea that
judgments of taste can only exist where society exists. The author
regards Friedrich Schiller's and Hannah Arendt's approaches on the
normative resources of Kant's aesthetics for moral and political
thought. He evaluates the discovery of the presence of a constant
feature of Kant's conception of freedom in both his aesthetic and
moral theory: freedom as autonomy.
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