From: J. R. Molloy (jr@shasta.com)
Date: Thu Sep 09 1999 - 09:34:12 MDT
Robert J. Bradbury wrote,
> ...The self-selection of
>attributes presumably depends to some degree on how one perceives
>those attributes will be received by those around you. From
>my perspective, a more significant question is, what attributes
>will individuals select, when anyone can select them? Will
>they select the putative biological "norms" that have been most
>successful, or will individuals attempt to distinguish themselves
>from the "norm" in creative, unusual or even freaky ways?
Perhaps unconscious genetically motivated behaviors will determine what
attributes individuals select. Selection based on perceived beauty may also
derive from unconscious genetically organized factors such as neurological
hard-wired patterns of symmetry which appeal to the eye on the basis of
that very symmetry. Even new born babies prefer pretty faces to ugly ones.
(pretty = symmetrical with balanced proportions)
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