Eskander
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I already demolished your other thesis justifying slavery. After several replies you could not give me an objective, scientific basis for your thesis: you could not define 'greatness' objectively.
This thread has the same fundamental flaw: until you can provide objective, scientific definitions for your terms (greatness, beauty, etc), this is just another pseudo-scientific desperate attention grab.
Okay one topic at a time, let's discuss beauty. I will post a couple of pics to make my point clear and back them up with scientific studies
Research over the past 20 years has shown that judgments of facial attractiveness are universal; people from all cultures and backgrounds rank and rate faces for attractiveness the same. As such a model for objectively rating facial attractiveness is theoretically plausible, if designed, it would have many uses, including outcomes analysis in plastic surgery of the face. The authors tested a schematic facial composite/prototype mathematical model (the phi mask created by Dr. Stephen Marquardt) as a method for measuring facial attractiveness in an objective manner.
An objective system for measuring facial attractiveness - PubMed
The phi mask model supports averageness or prototypicality of the face as being the major component of the facial attractiveness gestalt and is a first step in producing an objective system for measuring facial attractiveness.
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
What makes a face attractive and why do we have the preferences we do? Emergence of preferences early in development and cross-cultural agreement on attractiveness challenge a long-held view that our preferences reflect arbitrary standards of beauty set by cultures. Averageness, symmetry, and sexual dimorphism are good candidates for biologically based standards of beauty. A critical review and meta-analyses indicate that all three are attractive in both male and female faces and across cultures. Theorists have proposed that face preferences may be adaptations for mate choice because attractive traits signal important aspects of mate quality, such as health. Others have argued that they may simply be by-products of the way brains process information. Although often presented as alternatives, I argue that both kinds of selection pressures may have shaped our perceptions of facial beauty.
The evolutionary psychology of facial beauty - PubMed
What makes a face attractive and why do we have the preferences we do? Emergence of preferences early in development and cross-cultural agreement on attractiveness challenge a long-held view that our preferences reflect arbitrary standards of beauty set by cultures. Averageness, symmetry, and...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Tell me , is beauty really in the eye of the beholder ?
Who is more beautiful here ?
Or