Abstract
The antinomy of teleological judgment is one of the most controversial passages of Kant’s
"Critique of the Power of Judgment". Having developed the idea of an explanation of organized
beings by mechanical and teleological natural laws in §§ 61-68, in §§ 69-78 Kant raises the question of whether higher order mechanical and teleological natural laws, which unify the particular empirical laws of organized beings, might pose an antinomy of conflicting principles within the power of judgment. I will argue against alternative views that this antinomy is neither a conflict between objective constitutive principles of the determining power of judgment nor a conflict between an objective constitutive principle of the determining power of judgment and a subjective regulative maxim of the reflecting power of judgment nor does it
consist in a confusion of a pair of subjective regulative maxims of the reflecting power of judgment
with a pair of objective constitutive principles of the determining power of judgment, but does consist in an apparent conflict between mechanical and teleological natural laws as subjective regulative maxims of the reflecting power of judgment. I will further argue that Kant’s resolution of the antinomy consists in the regulative idea of a supersensible that represents the unity of both kinds of natural laws and justifies the unification of both kinds of natural laws in the human power of judgment. Kant uses three notions when he talks about
the supersensible – the regulative idea of a divine artisan, the regulative idea of a divine intuitive
understanding, and the regulative idea of an underdetermined, supernatural ground of
nature. I will show how each of these notions accounts for the unity of both kinds of natural
laws and will discuss possible correlations between them. I will then explain how the unity of
both kinds of natural laws in the regulative idea of a supersensible accounts for the unification
of both kinds of natural laws in the human power of judgment. While the divine intuitive
understanding is perfect and uncreated and, thus, capable of a representation of the unity
of both kinds of natural laws, the human discursive understanding is imperfect and created;
it is capable only of the representation of the unification of both kinds of natural laws in form
of a hierarchy of laws.