Critique of Judgement by Immanuel Kant Chapter 63 Page 9

fundamental for the cause which collects all these natural products, would be a very venturesome and arbitrary judgement.

For even if there were none of this natural utility, we should miss nothing as regards the adequateness of natural causes to nature’s constitution; much more even to desire such a tendency in, and to attribute such a purpose to, nature would be the part of a presumptuous and inconsiderate fancy. For indeed it might be observed that it could only have been the greatest unsociability among men which thus scattered them into such inhospitable regions.