Critique of Judgement by Immanuel Kant Chapter 41 Page 6

confounded with all the inclinations and passions, which attain their greatest variety and highest degree in society; and the interest in the Beautiful, if it is grounded thereon, can only furnish a very ambiguous transition from the Pleasant to the Good.

But whether this can or cannot be furthered by taste, taken in its purity, is what we now have to investigate.