This excellent volume on Baumgarten's aesthetics edited by J. Colin McQuillan provides a wide ranging set of essays that expand on Baumgarten's new science of sensible cognition as well as the aesthetic perfections of clarity and liveliness that characterize beauty. The essays collected in this volume also show how this new discipline relates to the modern search for the art of invention, the Pietist faith in communication through the affects, and Baumgarten's influence on later philosophers.
— Rudolf A. Makkreel, Charles Howard Candler Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Emory University
This volume of excellent studies helps the English readership better understand that the phenomenon of the aesthetic is a highly important modern development, and that, during its evolution in the eighteenth century, several ideas, insights and theoretical tracks were raised which later, especially after Immanuel Kant’s contribution to the field, became underestimated, less discussed, if at all, or even misunderstood.
— Endre Szécsényi, honorary research fellow, University of Aberdeen, and professor of aesthetics, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University
This is a vibrant collection of essays that decisively underlines A. G. Baumgarten's dynamism and independence as a thinker, carefully traces the breadth and depth of his historical influence, and makes a compelling and innovative case for his enduring contemporary relevance.
— Corey W. Dyck, professor of philosophy, Western University
Baumgarten is an essential link in the tradition of modern German philosophy and his aesthetics is central to understanding the originality of his philosophical project. This volume unites the best, previous scholarship on Baumgarten’s aesthetics with exciting new essays demonstrating the continued significance of his thought. It will be essential reading for all scholars of modern German philosophy and the history of aesthetics and, due to its thorough introduction and comprehensive scope, could also serve brilliantly as an introductory textbook.
— Courtney Fugate, associate professor of philosophy and civilization studies, American University of Beirut
This book should reignite interest in Baumgarten’s aesthetics, appealing not only to historians of philosophy but also to philosophers of art and aesthetics.
— Journal of the History of Philosophy