A Critical Assessment Of The Role Of The Imagination In Kant’s Exposition Of The Mathematical Sublime

Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 4 (3):24-31 (2007)
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Abstract

Kant argues in the Critique of Judgment (CJ) that there are two distinct modes of the sublime. This essay will concentrate on the mathematical mode. It is helpful to begin an examination of the mathematical sublime by elucidating the difference between logical estimation and aesthetic estimation; it is aesthetic estimation under strain, so Kant argues, that instigates the moment of the sublime. Logical estimation forms the cognitive basis of scientific calculations. He argues that scientific enquiry only requires an understanding of the logical relationship of numbers and so does not require an aesthetic experience of those numbers.

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