MartinC wrote on 02/14/21 at 09:43:12:
There's a slight misunderstanding showing up here, I think. I don't think the top players blindly follow fashion to any great extent.
Blindly is hardly the most suitable adverb for how someone is following the latest fashion.
No doubt there is a misunderstanding, because when I use the word fashion I mean that multiple players take up an opening for the simple reason that they see some top player has played it, *without* reference to the theoretical value. In other words, it may be better than what they were playing previously, or worse, or the same. That's not exactly blind. In logical terms it's an appeal to authority, which can be a fallacy in some circumstances.
MartinC wrote on 02/14/21 at 09:43:12:
A bit yes, but when they move en mass there's something concrete behind it at the point they move. ...
Well you may have committed a fallacy there. It's called begging the question, and it's precisely why I called it a tricky thing.
How fashion might work for strong players is fairly simple.
- They play things they have been analyzing.
- They analyze things they have seen recently.
- Paying attention to what potential future opponents might play against them, what they have seen recently is games by other strong players.
When top players move
en masse to a new opening it may indeed be because of theoretical problems with what they were playing before. But we shouldn't just assume that. Maybe they merely lost interest in it, which is another symptom of the fashion industries.