I recently realized that this is embedded in our language. My 4-year was confused by the phrase "good-looking". She assumed that it meant people who look like they're good.
By four, she's already internalized that attractive people are good and unattractive (by local standards) are bad. Scary.
To me it sounds like she hear the term "good-looking" and interpreted as someone who looks like they're good. Not internalizing some societal idea about attractive people.
There are many defining visual characteristics that are anthropomorphically indicators of "good" or "bad" people, that don't necessarily have to do with attractiveness.
By four, she's already internalized that attractive people are good and unattractive (by local standards) are bad. Scary.