Chris - that is a pretty fair assessment of the way a majority of golfers see it. To them, just getting on the green should give them a makable putt. In favt, the only time I really see edges of green pinned is when the green is small and/or old and has slopes too steep for todays speeds in an effort to try to find easier putts (or should I say easier misses?)
A 50' putt up and over a +2' roll down to a -2' pin across a 4% side slope - thus requiring perfect speed on top of hitting the perfect spot atop the ridge some 20' above the direct line - is a bit too demanding for most, especially since anything beyond perfection in speed AND line results in a 10'+ min. second putt - which they will probably miss too!
Although I'm sure a majority here would relish it and exclaim what "great fun" it was.
I just did a huge 11,500 sf "double-wide" green on a medium 4 at a club. Think of 2 - 6,000 sf greens side-by-side, like an cell dividing, with an "easy side" and a "hard side". A huge Oak dictated that the middle back be pinched in and a hollow be created to make grade work. I purposely sloped the rear 12" of the green back, around the hullow so one could putt around to the low from deep left to deep right by using that curved slope.
Imagine my surprise when a grouchy member cornered me one day in the clubhouse to bend my ear on "How Unfair" that "Ridiculous" green was! "Hell, you can't even get from one side to the other without Chipping! - yada yada ydad."
He was pretty pissed when I suggested he try a putter and stalked off when I offered a $100 bet that I could get it from anywhere to anywhere on that green he chooses, by putting.