Sure it is an over analyzation.
1. Over analyzing is not wrong afterwards. 2. It doesn’t work on forehand.
The reason I over analyzed is to stop the ‘yes’ and ‘no’ discussion.
1. Not "wrong" but pointlessly too late!
2. When about to shoot, I agree with you. But because there should be
reaction to whatever you see, not thought. Thought is too slow. You can think once you've found something static that you dig - hence my separate slot for street art - but otherwise, I think you'll miss the boat.
Even with famous photographs one knows well, such as Leiter's shot from behind of the girl with the loose ponytail (Joanna, c.1947) it can come as a bit of a shock to discover the truth behind the image. I first saw the picture, untitled, online in various collections of the Leiter oeuvre; then, I bought the Steidl two-volume edition called
Saul Leiter, early black and white (one book of his interior work, and the other of his outdoor photography). To some surprise, the shot is to be found in the indoor book, whereas the truth is that it's an outdoor picture. There are several such errors. But the biggie is this: having thought it to be a good representation of the decisive shot, if not moment, it turns out to be a snap of a family friend. Bang! goes the thought of a great street capture! A similar disappointment comes from other snaps of friends previously assumed to have been nothing but total strangers to the photographer.
Sometimes, too much information is destructive.