wondering whether, if technology had had no impact, this determined effort at "continual change" would still be there, and what form(s) it would take. In short, I'm wondering why some golfers (past and present) seem alwasy dis-satisfied with their fields of play, and where they'd focus their complaints if length wasn't an issue.
Peter
Technology always has an impact, even if for this exercise we imagine a 'roll-back', it does not exclude all the other things that have effected golf design: irrigation systems, turf-grass, maintenance equipment. The true question I think you are alluding to is why do men like to tinker with things?
1. We like to create more than maintain.
2. Even something great and wonderful can be improved.
as for the second part, 'where they'd focus their complaints if length wasn't an issue' most complaints I hear have little to do with length; which can attest to the concept that the whole length argument is overblown. I will conclude with a handful of complaints I hear often:
-greens too fast
-greens too slow
-playing corridor too narrow
-playing corridor doesn't provide strategy
-greens too undulating
-greens boring
-stupid cart girl comes around too often
-'where's the cart girl?'
Men will always complain about something, won't we?