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Subject: Philosophy  Book Title: The Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature
The Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature
Budd, Malcolm , Emeritus Grote Professor of Philosophy of Mind and Logic, University College London
Print publication date: 2003
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-925965-6
doi:10.1093/0199259658.001.0001
 
Abstract: Consists of four self-contained essays on the aesthetics of nature, which complement one another by exploring the subject from different points of view. The first is concerned with how the idea of aesthetic appreciation of nature should be understood and proposes that it is best understood as aesthetic appreciation of nature as nature—as what nature actually is. This idea is elaborated by means of accounts of what is meant by nature, what is meant by a response to nature as nature, and what an aesthetic response consists in, and through an examination of the aesthetic relevance of knowledge of nature. The second essay, which is divided into three separate chapters, expounds and critically examines Immanuel Kant's theory of aesthetic judgements about nature. The first of these chapters deals with Kant's account of aesthetic judgements about natural beauty; the second with his claims about the connections between love of natural beauty and morality (which are contrasted with Schiller's claim about love of naive nature); and the third examines his theory of aesthetic judgements about the sublime in nature, rejecting much of Kant's view and proposing an alternative account of the emotion of the sublime. The third essay argues against the assimilation of the aesthetics of nature to that of art, explores the question of what determines the aesthetic properties of a natural item, and attempts to show that the doctrine of positive aesthetics with respect to nature, which maintains that nature unaffected by humanity is such as to make negative aesthetic judgements about the products of the natural world misplaced, is in certain versions false, in others inherently problematic. The fourth essay is a critical survey of much of the most significant recent literature on the aesthetics of nature. Various models of the aesthetic appreciation of nature have been advanced, but none of these is acceptable and, it is argued, no model is needed.

Keywords: aesthetic appreciation, aesthetic properties, aesthetic judgement, aesthetic response, aesthetics, beauty, Budd, Kant, natural beauty, nature, philosophy, philosophy of nature, Schiller, The sublime
Table of Contents
Preface
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I.. Kant on Natural Beauty
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II.. Kant on Natural Beauty and Morality
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III.. Kant on the Sublime in Nature
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0199259658.001.0001
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