Wow thats crazy ironic , how the hell did you figure that out?
I have a book on art history entitled "Classical Art: The Golden Age Of Greece". It's in German and was written around the late 19th Century. They state that the Greeks saw the human physique as the epitome of creation, and bestowed upon their gods, in tribute, statues that represented them with extraordinary physiques. These physiques would be considered impossible even by modern Olympia standards.
The statue of Apollon, in the city-state of Corinth, for instance, shows a youth in bloom, around his post-adolescence or early twenties, possesed of a physique characterized by impossible symmetry, superb completeness - no muscle missing -, and extraordinary shape, with all the muscle bellies being very long and round, and attaching to impossibly small joints. His V-taper is simply outstanding and it tapers down to a six-pack that is absolutely symmetrical and really, really deeply etched. He has the round muscles of Wheeler, with the structure of Reeves. Superb. His face shows androgyny, one of the hallmark characteristics of adolescent boys around that age, and of course it is also impossibly perfect.
Hercules, conversely, featured by Fidias in one of his sculptures, is represented as a mature adult man in his late thirties to age forty, at his peak of muscular density and maturity. He has a large, masculine face, a square jaw and is heavily bearded. His face, of course, is impossibly symmetrical, but also harsh.
His physique is the ultimate in power and density, with a torso and muscularity that, although not on par with the ergogenically built physiques of today, would impress the Olympia judges due to the incredible thickness, which is enhanced by the large rib cage, and the sqare \ness of the muscles give it an impression of density and power that is unmatched. His is not a pretty boy's physique; it is a manly man's one. Of course, he is also absolutely complete and symmetrical, but his shape gives an impression of power rather than the boyish grace of Apollon.

SUCKMYMUSCLE
P.S: I'm still waiting for Sperm's reply to my post. No matter how many times I read his diatribes, I don't understand his retarded logic. Could anyone please explain to me how a dehydrated man at 3% bodyfat can gain pounds of muscular bodyweight and still lose 10 to 13 pounds of bodyweight? Anyone?