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Not necessarily (and in this specific instance, no, absolutely not). Grecian sculptures were informed by their societal beauty standards.
An individual with a facial profile indicative of high fighting success may be aesthetically pleasing to the eye, but the two are in no way exclusive to one another. In fact, highly dimorphic facial features indicative of such success can appear brutish, and if the soft tissue features aren’t up to aesthetic par the finished product can appear very . . . rudimentary.
Such aesthetic dimorphism is colloquially known by the slang term ‘masthethic’.
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I have never seem a single living human look like that.
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Yes he has a sloping forehead and eyes too protuberant/ non deep , on the topic I would guess that to take a punch and not hurt the eye or nose bone a protruding browridge would be quite more protective with as low angle as possible in relation to the nosebridge(<90° profile angle).The greek profile angle is literaly 0°.
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