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No, there is no correlation between the scale of perfection and percentage of the population. The average person scores 5/10, sure, but it doesn't follow that, say, 40% of the population are a 6/10 or nigher. Because the scale is not about percentages, but about how mathematically faces come close to perfection in terms of balance, symmetry and perfection + height + frame. For every point above 5, the percentage of people that score it decreases exponentially. I would say:Pietro Boselli is the perfect man.
Also, 9/10 does not mean 0.01%, it really means the upper 10% of the distribution?
6/10 --> top 25% of people.
7/10 --> top 4%
810 --> top 0.3%
9/10 --> top 0.01%
Above a 9/10, it become more difficult to climb the ladder because all Human Beings have imperefections, and a 10/10 would not only require a perfect DNA, but also perfect developemnt, which is impossible. So:
9.1/10 --> top 0.003%
9.2/10 -->top 0.0005%
9.3/10 --> top 0.00001%
9.4/10 --> top 0.0000005%
9.5/10 --> top 0.000000025%
9.6/10 --> top 0.000000005%
9.7/10 --> top 0.0000000002%
9.8/10 --> top 0.00000000001%
9.9 /10 --> top 0.000000000000001%
10/10 --> Infinity
Lachowski scores between a 9.4/10 to 9.7/10. That is, the rarity of the symmetry and proportions of his face and skull combined with his height is somewhere between 1 in 200 milllion people to one in 500 billion people.
The most beautiful man to ever live(in terms of facial and sjull symmetry and proportions, and not personal preference) should score a 9.7/10. In theory, there have been around 40 billion men in all of World history, but you need to add one more decimal due to statistical error. It's somewhere between a 9.6 to a 9.7.
That means that Chico Lachowski is either the most beautiful man to ever live, or in the top 3-4. There should be no more than 3 or 4 men in the entire history of the Earth that can match his symmetry and proportion.
He is between a 9.4/10 to 9.7/10, and his most likely score is somewhere between 9.5 to 9.6, but probably closer to 9.6 than to 9.5. Maybe 9.575/10. That would be about 1 in 10 billion men. So there is at least a 25% chance that is the most beautiful man ever. If he is not, he is at least in the top #4.