Lester,
"Design intent is relative mostly to the designer" would be a great catch phrase for the bottom of your posts, or even the post of your bottom!
I agree. I was really struck by Mark's phraseology that a golfer is entitled to figure meaning out for him/herself. Perhaps that was self evident to all, but on a board where we discuss the meaning of designs, and there can be a groupthink about what it should mean, I just got the impression that Mark was really, really, deep! (In contrast to you and me, who are really deep in something.......)
I have relayed the story of a grand opening where a golfer (swear to god this is true) complimented me for the great angle into the green from a nearby parking lot! I guarantdamtee you that I thought of no such thing (and for all the lawyers, wouldn't admit it if I did?) But, I guess if he found his way to play the hole, it makes it all that much better doesn't it?
And for that matter, those Golden Age holes so many revere, how do they stack up? The inside-outside bunkering for instance, really dictates one good way to play the hole, no? And forces bogey upon those who can't muster the forced carry? Is not the Fazio anti strategy hole, or the Pete Dye inside inside bunkered hole to make it play harder for the longer hitters really better at providing multiple EQUAL options that allow golfers to find their own meaning?
Or perhaps the Doak (although he hates the Whitten phrase) "Random bunkering" would be the all time best (albeit at some maintenance cost) at providing multiple meanings for all that could be wildly different, rather than "I understood it, but I just couldn't play it that way!"