Most of my friends are big fans of heavy metal, but I abhor it ardently. I can match your example by saying heavy metal is unduly overrated, plus I do happen to think it sucks. One part of my head feels inclined to say that a judgment of sucking is a necessary component of the judgment of overratedness. However, I also think Finding Nemo is overrated, but I don’t think it sucks. This leads me to think there are degrees of overratedness; i.e. my tastes place Finding Nemo on a much higher position of enjoyability than all of heavy metal.
My friends who love heavy metal will accuse me of committing your proposed fallacy; they could say I’m not justified in saying heavy metal sucks just because it fails to please me. But if someone else says Finding Nemo sucks, I won’t blame them, even if my dislike for it doesn’t go that far.
It’s difficult to name a formal fallacy of personal tastes. It’s one thing to detect a flaw in matters of true/untrue, but quite another to say that there can be flaws in matters of like/dislike.
Is there a formal fallacy of taking something that’s overrated, and concluding that it sucks? (Because you overreact to the fact that it’s overrated)
We can call it Hipster Fallacy, maybe?
Seems like a specific case of reverting stupidity (but that’s not a formal name).
Perhaps specific examples could help. Can you name something that is clearly overrated and clearly doesn’t suck?
Good point!
Someone who thinks that looks are overrated, and then concludes that they don’t matter at all.
Someone who thinks that a basketball player is overrated, and then concludes that he sucks.
Most of my friends are big fans of heavy metal, but I abhor it ardently. I can match your example by saying heavy metal is unduly overrated, plus I do happen to think it sucks. One part of my head feels inclined to say that a judgment of sucking is a necessary component of the judgment of overratedness. However, I also think Finding Nemo is overrated, but I don’t think it sucks. This leads me to think there are degrees of overratedness; i.e. my tastes place Finding Nemo on a much higher position of enjoyability than all of heavy metal.
My friends who love heavy metal will accuse me of committing your proposed fallacy; they could say I’m not justified in saying heavy metal sucks just because it fails to please me. But if someone else says Finding Nemo sucks, I won’t blame them, even if my dislike for it doesn’t go that far.
It’s difficult to name a formal fallacy of personal tastes. It’s one thing to detect a flaw in matters of true/untrue, but quite another to say that there can be flaws in matters of like/dislike.