Love for Natural Beauty as a Mark of a Good Soul: Kant on the Relation between Aesthetics and Morality
Abstract
Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote: “In the tranquil landscape, and especially
in the distant line of the horizon, man beholds somewhat as beautiful
as his own nature” (2003. 39). Th e poet captures nicely an idea, dominant
in the contemporary environmental aesthetics, namely, that aesthetic
appreciation of nature is intimately connected with the moral nature within
us. Many of us have experienced when in contact with nature that its
beauty moves us in a way that goes deeper than its initial appeal; it elicits
in us a feeling of comfort, hope, a sense of well-being and belonging to the
world. My aim in this paper is to propose an explanation of the connection
between our aesthetic experience of natural beauty and our moral ideas.
I approach this problem in light of Kant’s aesthetic theory put forward in the
Critique of the Power of Judgment.