Regarding the body, the ideal body for both men and women has varied throughout the ages. Normally the ideal body was a reflection of what a society expected of an individual. In classical Greek times a man was expected to be a warrior, brave, skilled and a fighter. A consequence of this were the athletic bodies of Greek and Trojan warriors, which were depicted in sculptures and statues of the Greek Gods. For example, the women were expected to be beautiful and above all fertile, for which they had to be well nourished, a consequence of which are the fleshy bodies and wide hips typical of the sculptural representations of the Greek goddesses. For example, in later times in the Western world and especially in the times of the wildest capitalism, the fat man was the ideal man, because society conceived the ideal individual as a rich man, and as a consequence, he had to be well fed. Ideal bodies change throughout the ages. Today many are inspired by the bodies of the sculptures of the men of classical Greece, but their bodies have nothing to do with those of today, since their bodies were the result of the hard life in periods of war of that time and the bodies of today are excessively muscular bodies as a result of an unnatural and unhealthy life based on adulterating the chemical composition of their bodies by artificial and dangerous methods, which is extremely harmful to health. Deaths like that of Joesthetics are the consequence of leading that kind of life just to get an unnatural and unhealthy body that in no way corresponds to a real body.