Ronald,
Before bed, I reread the article and perhaps this is what you want us to discuss:
“Follow the land, follow the land.” That was always his mantra. “Don’t change the land.” When he learned how to design, during the Depression, there was no money, and the technology wasn’t there to do much even if the money had been. So the routing was everything; the land itself was supreme. Now, for much of our modern era, the land has been nothing. You wanted to build a golf course in the swamps, you cleaned up the swamps. You wanted a mountain course, you moved the mountains. It was a completely different approach, almost the reverse. My personal take on RTJ isn't that much different than Matt's, (i.e. some repetition) save that when I play one of his courses now, I am usually quite impressed by the kind of cool stuff he did, particularly in green contouring. But, all of his courses are now striking me as very traditional, too, despite how radical they were when originally built.
And most of his course don't really scrape the land the way most here envision, even though we recall the many big lakes, etc. But, tell me, of Spyglass, Hazletine, Peachtree, Bellrieve, etc., which ones don't seem to follow the natural countryside to you? Even in experimenting with big earthmoving, when required, I don't get the sense that he rearranged land to any great degree, other than to build his trademark tees, bunkers and greens.
My first post was admittedly what I wanted to discuss - my long held idea that the designs of the 50-70's almost had to evolve the way they did as a reaction to the times, the equipment, etc. I also am of the notion that most of us hold too short a view - those that think today's fads and trends will last forever or be treated more kindly in the future, as say, beehive hairdoo's - are most likely mistaken.
My local business columnist had an article reviewing all the predictions made over the decades. In his view, only "Future Shock" made the grade as far as business predictions from 1970 or so until now. Most others are hilariously wrong. So, I won't offer my take on the future here, just comment that looking back, it won't be what we think it will be.
My only real question on RTJ is why did they name some accounting software after one of his golf courses?