For discussion purposes only. Dr Mackenzie also wrote about the health-promoting aspects of the game: the walking, the good companionship, the time outside in nature and in natural settings, and the peaceful temperament that could be developed by learning to accept the luck and fate and vagaries of golf (and inherent in its fields of play). I think one could argue that much of that has been lost in the mechanized and modern version of the sport, and in the qualities of its fields of play, and with the card-and-pencil mentalility that has increasingly professionalized the world of golf. And I think that golf is a sport that, if you have the card-and-pencil mentality -- and I have enough of that mentality to know -- can just tear you up, i.e. it is just the hardest of all sports to get better at (at least in my experience, as someone who played several sports competitively early on and only took up golf later in life). So, you end up with a sport/game/past time that gives you none of the peacefulness of old-time golf, but none of the satisfactions of other modern-day sports either. Then add on top of that the expense and the time involved...it's a wonder anyone is playing it at all....
Peter