Abstract
In the Critique of the Power of Judgment, Immanuel Kant argues that when we
form a judgment of taste, the representation goes together with a demand that
we require others to share. Some commentators note that the aesthetic feeling
in a judgment of taste and its expectant universality seems to display a normative
necessity in the explicit judgment itself, and that the expression of this normative
component is sometimes stated as a claim to which everyone ought to conform. In this paper, I argue that the normative component of taste and its concomitant demand should not be interpreted too strongly as an actual expectation, but rather as only a conceivable possibility. Toward this end, I examine several passages for the declaration of taste to call into view certain caveats which suggest that Kant’s description of an intersubjective demand arising concomitantly with a judgment of taste functions only as an “analogical ought,” i. e., that the demand of taste is expressed as if the satisfaction I feel in a judgment of taste can possibly demand universal assent.