Hellcat
Unregistered
H
Beauty is a smile, holding your newborn baby in your arms and receiving their first pasta picture, that is beauty.
Hellcat said:Beauty is a smile, holding your newborn baby in your arms and receiving their first pasta picture, that is beauty.
Originally posted by neutrino_cannon
Beauty is what appeals to the organs of sight, or more acuratley, that big fatty mass behind them.
SpaceLord said:
The complete quote is:
Beauty is truth, truth beauty. That is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.
Ode on a Grecian Urn by Keats
AmateurScientist said:Actually, there is a recent school of thought arising from serious academic research with human subjects which may support the notion that some beauty is in fact innate, and thus not so subjective after all. For instance, there have been studies done at universities during which subjects from various cultures, of various ages, and of various backgrounds tended to pick the same faces--not necessarily of their own race or ethnicity--as ones depicting beauty. The researchers concluded that symmetry in the vertical plane--from left to right--was the single most important factor in determining whether a face is attractive or not, and the degree to which it is attractive. The most beautiful faces tend to be the most symmetrical. Also, the most generic features--those tending towards a norm in size and distance from other features--were universally found to be the most beautiful.
This suggests perhaps that gentle patterns, without abrupt changes, are innately beautiful to humans. It would not be contrary to what we already know about the human brain--that it tends to seek or recognize patterns in any given stimulus, even one which is truly random or chaotic.
Knowing this information, facial images generated completely from scratch, without basing them on any actual human faces, can be created which are reliably found to be beautiful by their intended audiences. We can see an example of this in the computer generated face of Aki in the animated movie feature "Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within," or many other animated features, for instance.
Perhaps beauty isn't so subjective after all, at least when it comes to faces.
AS
Biker Babe said:
Do you have a link to this particular study?