Great find, Connor. Very interesting to learn that CB was a closet nerd seemingly sympathetic to the Cranean Sphere of Golf Course Architecture Criticism.
Vis a vis the system itself, I think it has several flaws, but this is to be expected, given that we are looking at them from a 21st century perspective (at least most of are....). My gut feel vis a vis the specifics in relation to GCA quality is:
1. Course.
--Nature of the soil (13%--this can be remedied these days through technology and huge amounts of capital)
--Perfection in undulation etc. (0%--perfection is impossible)
--Nature of the natural undulations (16%)
2. Putting green
--Quality of turf (5%--this is very important but that is a maintenance rather than arhitectural issue)
--Nature of undulation well placed (1%--if you have good soil and good natural undulations you don't place things, you find them)
--Variety (10%--this is the spice of life, is it not?)
3. Bunkers and other Hazards
--Nature, size and variety (0%--I don't know what he was trying to say, but he probably didn't know either)
--Proper placing (20%-this is the essence of GCA, IMHO)
4. Length of hole
--best lengths (0%--might have been important in 1915, but not now)
--variety and arrangement of length (10%--see 2. above)
5. Quality of turf fair green (0%--already covered under 1. above)
6. Width of fairgreen at 45-60 yards (0%--irrelevant and simplistic)
6a. Complexity of fairgreen at 0-60 yards (15%--relevant and conducive to architecture/thought)
7. Nature of teeing grounds and proximity to greens (10%--score given mostly to propinquity).
IMHOATM
Rich