The purpose of putting together a list of ranking criteria is simply to survey what people value. From that list of criteria, I would expect everyone to have their own set that they value, which would lead to the set of courses they prefer. Thereby explaining why most disagree with the lists published.
". . . to survey what people value."
Garland, your wisdom shines brightly. I've always avoided ranking threads but you have a good point, as do others here on this thread.
Walkability, variability, originality, honesty, affordability, educationality, culture of clients and clubhouse, nurturing of junior golf, playability for all skill levels, turf condions.
In most rankings that I've seen, though the criteria is presented, the results get homogenized into aaveraging score and then that course is then ranked. If on the other hand, each score for each category is ranked independently, say through graphs or a number system, then what the individual golfer "values" can be appreciated much more deliberately.
Meaning, if a course gets high marks for waterfalls, then let us know that specifically. It makes no sense to some feller that always rides a cart to figure in "walkability" if he (lazy slug*) doesn't ever walk.
Example : Pacific Dunes
Walkability 9
Variabilty 9
Firm and fast 10
Culture 9
Originality 9
Routing 9
Views 10
Naturalness 9
Affordabilty >$200
Fun 10
Uniqueness 10
Weather 1 or 10
Cart girl DNA
(I used Pac Dunes cuz many of you have played it. You can argue about my numbers but they're virtually arbitrary since I'm a hacker and am not allowed to rate courses.)
*Not intended to slam on those that need carts to play.