Adam:
You asked me in an IM to comment. You also said that you felt architecture might be to blame for the waning popularity of golf or to blame for the fact it isn't increasing in popularity.
I do not believe that case can be made very well. To me there are probably so many contibuting factors to the waning popularity of golf (if that actually is happening) that include many things that have nothing to do with golf--eg general economic conditions, competition from other interests and perhaps even the dynamics of clubs themselves.
Mackenzie said that golf should be enjoyable and interesting and that it wouldn't be if luck was eliminated. That's sort of a feel-good statement that a lot of those old architects mentioned and they had an ulterior reason for doing that I think. Luck of some sort will always be in the game and most understand that.
Furthermore, this thread is an example of how differently people look at golf and what they are looking for in golf. I guess for that reason I developed my "Big World" theory that golf and architecture should be different enough in a spectrum sense to offer everyone the type of golf and architecture they want. Problem is you can't really do that very well on a single course but you can do it across the board.
I was on the boards of GAP and Pa Golf Assoc for years and for that reason got to see most all the clubs and courses around Philadelphia and many in Pennsylvania and I have never seen any particular club's popularity and endurance sustained necessarily because of the type of golf course they had and the original architect that built it. There are just many other reasons involved that make clubs popular or not.
I don't even know that golf needs to grow right now. Maybe it actually needs to shrink for a while. Maybe golf has been overused and misused in various ways and sort of fitted in some contexts it was not really supposed to be in, at least the way people like us on here look at it---it's hard to say. In the same breath, to supply an honest answer to you the question should be asked how represented our kinds of opinions are with golf or ever have been. Again, that's pretty hard to answer.
Rich Goodale said Max Behr was out of touch because of his theory of the "game mind" of man. Rich may be right about that, maybe he was out of touch with the everyday golfer and what he thought he wanted. It sure has occurred to me that some golfers, maybe many, don't even like the idea of naturalism in golf and that's why I started that other thread about the TRUTH of the DYNAMICS of what golfers really do like and again, what they really do like just could be all over the place and probably always has been. People have individual tastes and opinons and they are always going to be different. That's probably a good thing in the final analysis.
Again, that's why I developed my "Big World" theory and why I guess I've never really looked to architecture itself to blame something on.
But I know what I like and I also know where to find it. I just hope others can figure out how to do the same when it comes to golf and even its architecture. This may not have been the kind of answer to your question you were looking for and if not, sorry about that.