Classic Greek thought integrated ethics, proportion, and beauty into a unified understanding of the human form. Three interrelated concepts-aretê (disciplined excellence), kanon (measurable proportion), and kalos (socially perceived beauty)-shaped artistic and athletic ideals and continue to resonate within modern craniofacial surgery. Contemporary practice relies heavily on quantitative metrics of symmetry and proportion reminiscent of kanon, whereas surgical outcomes are inevitably interpreted through culturally mediated standards of attractiveness aligned with kalos. Less frequently examined is the role of aretê: the surgeon's disciplined self-governance, restraint, and ethical judgment. This article proposes that excellence in craniofacial surgery emerges from balancing these 3 dimensions. Proportion without ethical discipline risks mechanical standardization; responsiveness to beauty without structural grounding risks excess; discipline without cultural awareness risks rigidity. By revisiting the classic triad of aretê, kanon, and kalos, a balanced philosophical framework can be articulated in which the surgeon's character anchors the application of measurement and the interpretation of aesthetic perception. Such an integrated model offers conceptual clarity in an era of evolving aesthetic ideals and expanding technical capability.
Kim et al. (Mon,) studied this question.