Bryan,
I think I am having trouble understanding what points you are trying to make and your methodology for trying to make them. I have a few theories about what happened at Merion, I think I have offered plenty of support for those theories. I think my theories are the most reasonable and straightforward explanations of what happened at Merion. You aren't convinced and I can live with that. But all this dissection of what words I have used and what words your would prefer I use? What you can come up with to disagree with is that you prefer the word "teach" to "instruct?" I was hoping for a bit more of a substantive critique than this sort of nit-picking and word parsing.
You can describe the dynamic of the relationship however makes you most comfortable. I think the most reasonable understanding of the source material is that CBM/HJW were providing Merion with
specific guidance/ advice/ instruction/ teaching/ direction/ whatever-you-want-to-call-it as to what Merion ought to do with their land, including which holes they ought to build and where they ought to build them. And Merion acted accordingly.
It is certainly your prerogative to disagree, but you've never really offered or explained a more viable or reasonable alternative, and have never really explained your justification for viewing CBM/HJW's contributions as of a more general nature. Merion's internal Board records apparently never even mention Hugh Wilson, much less give him credit for coming up with the holes they out to try and build and their locations! Where is the direct evidence that Wilson and his committee came up with this stuff on their own?
In other words, you are again holding me to what I consider to be an unreasonable standard where you will not accept any theory or conclusion that builds on what we specifically know. Yet the alternative is one big tenuous house of cards, a pile of suppositions supported more by disproven legend and wishful thinking.
I thought your approach was a balancing of probabilities where you were trying to determine what is most likely? That doesn't seem to be the case. Does it? Or perhaps I have misunderstood.
What was the content that was quite specific about the routing and the hole designs?
This is what I am talking about. I don't think this is a reasonable standard or requirement, and it only seems to apply to one side of the argument. Surely I can come to a reasonable conclusion about the topic of the NGLA meeting without you producing for you a precise description of what exactly they discussed at NGLA! I base my conclusion about the specificity of the discussion on the Hugh Wilson chapter, the Alan Wilson letter, the Whigham article, the vast disparity in knowledge and experience between CBM/HJW on the one hand and those at Merion on the other,
the timing of the meeting, the Lesley report on what preceded and what followed, the subsequent trip to Merion by CBM/HJw, the existence of a contour map at the time, the descriptions of the course in the Ag letters, the previous comments by CBM, the previous inspection of the site, the subsequent inspection, the knowledge of how CBM worked in analogous circumstances with Raynor, etc. Not enough for you without a transcript? Then I cannot help you.
Moreover, there is NO BETTER ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATION. Did they just happen to rearrange the course after the NGLA meeting with no
specific input from CBM? If they were so little concerned with the specifics of his advice why burden him with yet another trip down to choose their final routing?
If his advice was so specific, why did they go back and create 5 more plans?[/color]
Where did I claim that every single specificity was settled at NGLA and why would you hold that out as some sort of requirement of specificity? Surely it is reasonable to think that they were working on the specifics but hadn't worked everything out, isn't it? And it is a big assumption on your part Merion created five more plans independent of CBM's advice and direction, and one I am unwilling to accept without some support beyond your interpretation of the report. I read it differently and think it more likely that they laid out the five variations of "the course" according to CBM's advice or five variations of "the course" because of ambiguities or unforeseen issues in CBM's advice. Either of these would explain why he had to come back down to choose which one was best. In contrast, I just cannot figure out under the other theory why they needed CBM/HJW after the NGLA meeting at all.
Are you saying that because CBM chose the final plan that he therefore was the creator of the routing and hole designs?
I don't understand why you would isolate out this one event from what had immediately preceded it? It is not as if he hadn't been involved up until this point but was just passing by and stopped in and chose the final plan. He had been working with Merion since they chose the land based on his advice back in June of the previous year, and he had been working on the layout with them at NGLA a few weeks before. His choosing of the final plan was the culmination of a long design process stretching back to June.
That CBM/HJW apparently had final say as to the layout plan informs us as to the level of his their involvement in the entire process. It doesn't get any more specific than choosing the final layout plan, does it? Yet you think it reasonable to believe that in the events leading up this he wasn't providing specific advice or instruction as to which holes they should build and where they should be located? Given that CBM/HJW were in put charge of choosing the final plan, I think it safe to assume that they had specific input into the process of creating that plan.
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Like so many things in this discussion I'd have to say that I don't know which is more reasonable. And, what difference would it make - if I thought it was more reasonable does not make it true.
You seem to be having trouble sticking to any particular methodology here. Aren't you the one who is supposed to believe in the balancing of probabilities here? Yet it doesn't matter which is more reasonable? You lost me here, again.
While the link between what is reasonable and what is true can sometimes seems a bit tenuous, the former can be an effective tool in trying to figuring out the latter.