Yes, I seriously think they should have done that before erroneously spreading incomplete ideas about what he knew and wrote. He wrote correctly about the camera's role in perspective in The Camera. He also wrote correctly about the viewer's role in perspective in The Print.
Rather than deserving to be impugned, I think he deserves credit for understanding and writing about what a great many later photographers did/do not understand.
It was about photography. There's room for matters to be discussed at all different levels and views. The one does not exclude the other. Of course, you're free to leave if you people are having conversations which you don't approve of, but it seems a bit extreme. Why not just not look at the ones you don't like?
It's not a competition - there's no need to compete. Just discuss.
I agree that Ansel Adams deserves credit for his massive contribution to photography, both in the photographs he took and in educating other photographers through his books and courses, etc.
However, like all of us, he did occasionally make mistakes. In his book "The Camera" he devotes two pages to discussing "subjective properties of lenses", including "wide-angle perspective" and "telephoto perspective". He emphasises that the "perspective depends only on the camera-to-subject distance" and nowhere is there any mention of the viewer's position relative to the photograph. It would take only a couple of sentences to mention the significance of the viewer's position.
I suspect that if he were here today, he would be appalled at how many photographers are unaware of the significance of the viewer's perspective and would immediately edit his book to include it.
We're just repeating our positions, and we're not likely to come to an agreement about them. Again, mine is that he said the right thing about the camera's role in perspective in a book about cameras and he said the right thing about the viewer's role in perspective in a book about prints. The subject of perspective in general was hardly more than a passing footnote in his famous trilogy. It was clearly not intended to be anything other than that, so having two brief observations about perspective appear in the specific books where they apply doesn't bother me at all. But I suppose he could have combined all three of them into one big volume, which might have encouraged readers to complete their reading instead of stopping short.
Another of my positions is that I never find much credence in what anyone (myself included) imagines a personage from the past would think or do today. Again, our positions might differ there as well.
I seriously think you are hung up on the subject of perspective. I think Adams was not hung up on it, but he knew all about it, and he said as much as he cared to say about it in his books about photography. There are plenty of other books that are all about perspective. People who are hung up on perspective should be reading those. Impugning Adams for not covering the subject in all its glory is just silly.
I revived this thread yesterday with a question, which I now repeat:
Despite all the discussion since, no-one has given a satisfactory answer.
Perhaps that means that everyone here now agrees that perspective distortions such as telephoto compression and wide-angle distortion depend on the viewer's position as well as the camera's position? 😉
That was never in doubt. It has always been well known that if you view a hyper wide angle shot from a very colse distance, you will see a more natural perspective.
I have illustrated above the geometrical theory of "natural" perspective. But the elephant in the room is asking why we should care about viewing a picture at such a distance and from a fixed point. Nobody ever views a painting or photograph in this way. The American academic in my PDF link used chopsticks to find the center of perspective and correct viewing distance, with one eye closed. On my last visit to the National Gallery in London nobody was using chopsticks to view the "Adoration of the Magi" by Sandro Botticelli from the centre of perspective and from the right distance.
Maybe it is just between to enjoy paintings and photographs with distorted perspective from a comfortable viewing distance.
Thank you for your concern. I am not hung up on the subject of perspective. I may be hung up on the many online tutorials that make claims such as in this one.
The title of the video is "Lens Compression Doesn't Exist - Here's Why". The video begins with a "dolly zoom" animation going from a wide-angle lens to a long telephoto while changing position so that the model stays the same size in the frame. The presenter then says "Now this animation may prove to you that lens compression does exist, but I actually want to show you that it is not the lens producing this look at all; it is the distance of the camera from the subject and from the background."
There are many other online tutorials that proceed along similar lines. They never mention the viewer's position relative to the centre of perspective. If they did, they could explain "lens compression" or "perspective compression" or "telephoto compression" with a simple zoom (without changing the camera position) without the need for a dolly zoom. He then proceeds to claim (without any evidence) that the compression effect is due to the "dolly" part of a dolly zoom, whereas it is really due to the zoom magnifying the image and causing the centre of perspective to move further and further away from the image.
I don't object to your objections about that YouTube video, or about any other misconceptions around perspective that are out there. I only object to the way you seemingly want to assign blame to Ansel Adams for those misconceptions to the point of naming a fallacy after him. The basic, correct information was in fact in at least two of his books. If you need to give that fallacy a name, there are much more appropriate choices.
Thank you for the thought, but I have not been the first to debunk it by any means. I have just been rather more persistent than most. It needs someone highly respected in photography to say it's a fallacy before many photographers will listen. That someone is certainly not me!
If you read through the comments to some of the online tutorials that repeat the fallacy, there is often one or two voices who point out the error, but they just get told that they don't know what they are talking about and most don't bother arguing further.