Sublimidad estética y ascetismo burgués: A propósito de la “Analytik des Erhabenen”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/1982-8837.pg.2004.67396Keywords:
Kant, Sublime, Bourgeois Asceticism, Dialectic of EnlightenmentAbstract
This paper investigates the disproportion of the Analytics of the Sublime in context of the Critique of Judgement, as an analogy to the impossibility of reconciling moral theory and practice, nature and reason; thus the bridge between the first and the second critiques, which should be mediated by the third, is marked anew: the sublime corresponds to the violence masked within social processes. Kant’s position is worked out upon the background of Shaftesbury and Burke and thus emerges the fact that the Königsberg philosopher is oriented towards ahistorical rational ideas. His concept of the sublime (as well as his ethics) is therefore situated in the traditions of protestant ascetism and bourgeois-capitalism. Both the beholder of sublime nature and art and the follower of moral imperative must equally relinquish everything material and the direct satisfaction of their yearnings in favour of a higher, intellectual satisfaction. In the same way, the absence of form or measure of the sublime has its parallel in the “negative infinity” of capital and in technological “second nature”.
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