

📖 Unlock the genius of Kant—where clarity meets timeless wisdom.
Critique of Judgement is a masterfully translated edition of Kant’s influential work, praised for its clarity and accessibility. This Oxford Classics edition is highly rated by readers and ranks prominently in religious and academic philosophy categories, making it an essential read for serious students and intellectuals alike.


| Best Sellers Rank | 234,030 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 183 in Religious Philosophy (Books) 261 in Academic Philosophy 477 in Historical Study & Teaching |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 101 Reviews |
M**L
Masterful!
Because Kant is such an important writer, whose thought continues to have an overbearing weight on academia and life today, is not the only reason you should read this excellent edition of the Critique of Judgement: it is because his reasoning is so lucid and superb, so incredibly persuasive, and so clear. This translation demonstrates Kant's astounding ability to reason to perfection so that everything he says seems obvious, whilst also not at all reading like a translation. This is a remarkable work which every serious student should read.
A**R
this a good way to get into Kant's philosophy
a bit easier than Critique of Pure Reason, this a good way to get into Kant's philosophy. Oxford classics are always a good bet, and was nicely packaged by Blackwells.
L**A
Excellent
Excellent edition.
J**S
Five Stars
great everything as ordered
Z**I
Five Stars
Good book and good service... thanks
P**G
Excellent read
Needed for a BA Course.........Excellent read
G**R
Not complete and a poor edition
I bought this thinking it was the Oxford World's Classics edition - it is the Kindle option below the Oxford print edition information. But it isn't. No introduction from Nicholas Walker, but, more importantly, it doesn't seem to have Part Two, Critique of Teleological Judgement. It ends with SS60, so there's a third missing from the Oxford text. This is irritating, and that means I've wasted the money on this. It seems like false advertising, though caveat emptor could come into play. Also: no page numbers, frequent typos from a poorly edited scan, not searchable. Really annoying! At least others should take note: if the cover of the kindle edition doesn't match the print copy, well, you take your chances...
A**R
Can't search this
Bought this because I didn't want to look through my copy of Kant for key words that may not be in the index. Well, guess what? You can't ctrl + F this thing. And what's the point of a digital edition of a philosophy book if you can't!
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