Critique of Judgement by Immanuel Kant Chapter 30 Page 1

The remaining part of the Analytic of the Aesthetical Judgement contains first the DEDUCTION OF [PURE] AESTHETICAL JUDGEMENTS

The Deduction of aesthetical judgements on the objects of nature must not be directed to what we call Sublime in nature, but only to the Beautiful.

The claim of an aesthetical judgement to universal validity for every subject requires, as a judgement resting on some a priori principle, a Deduction (or legitimatising of its pretensions) in addition to its Exposition; if it is concerned with satisfaction or dissatisfaction in the form of the Object. Of this kind are judgements of taste about the Beautiful in Nature.

For in that case the purposiveness has its ground in the Object and in its