Hi Mike, Are you related to Humpty Dumpty? "When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less."
You probably ought to look up the word before you use it.
I fully understand what you mean by ambiguity. But to me many of your points (reply #17) are beyond Occam's razor
But why has the man walked toward the flood on the little ladder? Since it's obvious he's not dressed for wading why is he jumping into the water? [1] There's another man in the picture, slouching behind a fence. What's he doing there? Why is the partially destroyed poster on that desolate fence [2]?"
[1] because he has to in order to get to where he wants to be. The mere fact he is not dressed for wading means we know he is going to get wet which adds a sense of inevitability, and the reflection adds an interesting geometry
[2] Because it is. It was once a full poster but has got weathered and to me is no more meaningful a question as 'why did the rock of Half Dome not become eroded like the rocks so close to it'. The fact it happened has added another pattern and adds to the sense of dereliction also given by the ladder and hoops lying in the water.
I am not for one moment saying you are wrong for having these thoughts because interpretation of an image is a very personal thing. What I am saying is that to take what you do from a picture and use that to include/exclude someone else's work seems like stretching a point.
Now it may be that we both have a fair few thoughts about this (and many other pictures) in common and the issue is one of how we verbalise what it is we see/feel. As I have said before I can see where you are coming from but I just don't think you can say 'I don't see X in an image therefore it is not street photography'.