originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Nice to be in such illustrious company, even though he didn’t get around much, if at all.
In truth, as you may remember from a long ago conversation, I believe the perception of quality to have no objective basis, being entirely a culturally-influenced projection of the viewer, so I don’t know why it continues to surprise me when bored members with many other esthetic judgments in common disagree on the merits of this movie. You’re all right, it shouldn’t surprise me.
Kant doesn't disagree with your belief that aesthetic evaluations have no objective basis. His claim was that it is part of our aesthetic apprehension that we take our own aesthetic evaluations as having objective bases even though we know, or ought to know, logically, that they do not. He is describing how we feel about our aesthetic judgments--as opposed to our judgments of physiological taste such as liking or not liking vanilla ice cream. And his evidence for the claim is that we do engage in arguments of the kind we are having here, as if we expect that our aesthetic evaluations were evidence based. Look at your original post criticizing the movie, in which you adduce reasons for your criticism even thougn, per this post, you don't think your judgment has an objective basis. I am not criticizing you for being hypocritical but describing the contradiction as what Kant calls the antinomy of the aesthetic judgment.