Beauty, Measure, and Intervention: The Surgeon as a New Sculptor-Philosopher.

The Journal of craniofacial surgery 2025 Vol.36(8) p. e1303-e1306

Hwang K

Abstract

This paper explores the ethical, aesthetic, and technical dimensions of plastic surgery through the lens of classic ideals. Drawing from ancient Greek concepts- kalokagathia (the unity of beauty and moral goodness) and kanon (the mathematical rule of bodily proportion)-it frames modern surgical practice within a triangle of values: ethical beauty, measurable form, and clinical intervention. Each section investigates one vertex of this conceptual triangle, combining philosophical insight with clinical vignettes to illustrate the enduring human desire not just to look whole, but to feel whole. Through case reflections on trauma, identity, and aesthetic choice, the essay argues that surgery is not merely a technical discipline but a form of ethical artistry. In reconstructing faces, surgeons often restore more than anatomy; they navigate a deeper terrain of memory, dignity, and self-perception. The ideals of kalokagathia caution against beauty that is divorced from character, while kanon reminds us of the seductive precision of proportion-which may not always serve individuality. Surgery, as the third point in the triangle, mediates between ancient forms and living complexity. Ultimately, the surgeon is positioned as a modern sculptor-philosopher-tasked not only with reshaping flesh, but with interpreting form in light of values. This narrative calls for a reflective surgical ethos that honors proportion, preserves authenticity, and restores meaning. In doing so, we return to questions as old as sculpture and as urgent as today's clinic: what is beauty, and what does it mean to restore it?

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 lens scispacy 1
질환 trauma C0043251
Wounds and Injuries
scispacy 1
기타 human scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Humans; Beauty; Surgery, Plastic; Plastic Surgery Procedures; Esthetics; Surgeons