Critique of Judgement by Immanuel Kant Chapter 40 Page 7

than sound Understanding can; and that the aesthetical Judgement rather than the intellectual may bear the name of a communal sense, if we are willing to use the word “sense” of an effect of mere reflection upon the mind: for then we understand by sense the feeling of pleasure. We could even define Taste as the faculty of judging of that which makes universally communicable, without the mediation of a concept, our feeling in a given representation.

The skill that men have in communicating their thoughts requires also a relation between the Imagination and the Understanding in order to associate intuitions with concepts, and concepts again with those concepts, which then combine in a cognition.

But in that case the agreement of the two mental powers is