"In my last post, my main point was that Coore may be exploring new ways to provide strategic interest, and I was making a (mystical and moisty, yes) leap by assuming that he may now be recognizing how much the GOLFER HIMSELF brings to the table in terms of seeing those strategies. It's of the same nature (but to a different degree) as exploring how blind tee-shots or other kinds of visual deception work, isn't it?"
Peter:
Apparently you have just arrived at the door of the philosophical house of one Max Behr who in the minds of a few on here may've been the ultimate philosphical genius on architecture or necessarily natural architecture and the underlying reasons why it should be that way or is better that way.
Of course there will always be some relationship between a course's architect and those who play his courses but Behr thought the best architects were able to provide golfers something where they felt that playing the course was less about a contest with the architect and more in the way of some contest or interrelationship with Nature itself. Behr actually had a remarkably interesting reason why it should be that way or would be better that way.
Behr felt a golfer should be given as much FREEDOM as possible to feel he was finding his own way, figuring out his own unique strategies for himself. He felt that kind of thing was a 'call upon his intelligence' and that that kind of experience would be the most gratifying.
If you open the door of Max Behr's philosophical house, go in inside, and get to know him, I will almost guarantee you will never be the same again and you will never look at golf architecture the same again either.
There's only one problem with Behr---his writing style is so odd it takes about half a lifetime to understand what he's saying.