"I've met people that insist one should play from the back tees in order to truly appreciate a golf course.
Do you agree?"
I agree but I doubt I'd recommend it for very many. I think it just depends on what you're trying to accomplish---eg what you're looking for as both a golfer and a golf architectural analyst. I know I almost always play a course from the tips the first time and I'm I guy who even if I once played a lot of tournament golf never really hit my driver much more than 250 yards in neutral conditions.
But I enjoy seeing what any course is like from the tips and of course I very much relate it to my own game as well as those who regularly play the tips and who they're designed for. Doing this kind of thing can get a little depressing to say the least as it really shows how different various levels of golfers are.
"Does a golfer have to play any particular tee to get the "full" appreciation of an architects work? Is this true for any architect that you know of?"
Adam:
Even if this seems like a very hard question to answer I think it's a very fundamental question the more one thinks about it.
The more I get to know about architecture and anyone who deals with it at all the more I realize just how hard it is for most any person, golfer, even architects to truly visualize the realities of other golfers' games---and particularly right across the spectrum. And then of course to actually design for it well across the spectrum.
I've even seen some architects who I consider to be very fine architects who I think can be really weak in this area.
I think an architect (or anyone else) has to just force themself to consider this subject very specifically and observation is the best educator. Either that or they have to be naturally curious about this subject and question.
The two I know of who I think seem naturally interested in this area are Doak and Nick Faldo.
But it's a really fundamental subject and question, in my opinion, and if one thinks about it it's an area that can sort of make or break golfers' enjoyment of a golf course;
But as Ross said;
"It's easy to build a hard course and it's easy to build an easy course but it's not easy to build a course that can both accommodate and also challenge every level of golfer well".
But to understand how well any course does that one should probably play it from all lengths while at the same time not just viewing it in the context of your own game but truly appreciating the realities of the games of golfers other than yourself---and that is not an easy thing to do, and it's not easy to find people who can do that well----even amongst some otherwise very good architects.