For some reason, reading this thread the concept of 'TIME' came to mind.
In this case, not the Time the architect takes to find & build a hole/course, but the Time we take to play it.
If we were able to free ourselves from the relentless pressures-constraints of Time (both from the outer world, and the inner) and to play a golf course as if we truly had 'all the time in the world', I wonder if it would impact our notions of a GREAT hole.
As it is, we usually only have (or give ourselves) a limited amount of Time to 'take in' what a golf hole presents to us. In that context, the great ones may be, at least in part, the most INSISTENT ones.
It's interesting: from years of reading here, my impression is that C&C build great & highly praised and very popular golf COURSES, and yet -- relatively speaking -- posters here don't highlight their great HOLES nearly as often as they do those by other top architects, past and present.
I wonder if that's because, with C&C taking so much Time to quietly FIND those golf holes, they're of a kind-quality that require golfers to take a lot of Time to APPRECIATE them.