@jassyskyl:

jassyskyl
jassyskyl
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Wednesday 15 January 2025 17:34:09 GMT
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Where u from luv
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Neeed that💕💕💕
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Sexy baby 🥵🥰
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People have always been concerned with beauty , and the need to be #beautiful has placed huge demands on those wanting to look good. Emaciating diets, rib-crushing corsets, and foot binding are not historical artefacts to be ignored.  But according to the philosopher Heather Widdows, these beauty ideals were once localised and a matter of taste, but today they are universal. Widdows argues that today, in almost all cultures, women and increasingly men are expected to satisfy four global #beauty ideals: thinness, firmness, smoothness, and youthfulness. Because we live in an overwhelmingly visual age, we obsess over these beauty ideals, and of course, the internet has made things worse. It’s 2025, so I don’t need to patronise you by telling you that most of the things that you see on #socialmediaare airbrushed, doctored, and fake. But with those points out, a strange thing—and that there is evidence to say that even when we know a picture is fake or a photo has been airbrushed—we still want to look like it. We know that the standards are unachievable. We know that these idealised bodies are impossible, and yet we still want them. For Widdows, the answer is to recognise just how #visual our #culture is, and from there, we need to reacquaint ourselves with what our other senses can provide. We need to listen to people’s voices, to shake hands, and to kiss cheeks. We need to hear, to touch, and to smell other people. Humans were not meant to live by one sense alone. There is so much more to enjoy. #philosophy #identity
People have always been concerned with beauty , and the need to be #beautiful has placed huge demands on those wanting to look good. Emaciating diets, rib-crushing corsets, and foot binding are not historical artefacts to be ignored. But according to the philosopher Heather Widdows, these beauty ideals were once localised and a matter of taste, but today they are universal. Widdows argues that today, in almost all cultures, women and increasingly men are expected to satisfy four global #beauty ideals: thinness, firmness, smoothness, and youthfulness. Because we live in an overwhelmingly visual age, we obsess over these beauty ideals, and of course, the internet has made things worse. It’s 2025, so I don’t need to patronise you by telling you that most of the things that you see on #socialmediaare airbrushed, doctored, and fake. But with those points out, a strange thing—and that there is evidence to say that even when we know a picture is fake or a photo has been airbrushed—we still want to look like it. We know that the standards are unachievable. We know that these idealised bodies are impossible, and yet we still want them. For Widdows, the answer is to recognise just how #visual our #culture is, and from there, we need to reacquaint ourselves with what our other senses can provide. We need to listen to people’s voices, to shake hands, and to kiss cheeks. We need to hear, to touch, and to smell other people. Humans were not meant to live by one sense alone. There is so much more to enjoy. #philosophy #identity

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