Mark:
I'm not sure what you're asking.
What do you mean by 'the best miss'?
And then you say this;
“Bunkers are normally thought of as a hazard to be avoided, a penalty for a loose shot, but can/should they be employed for the purpose of providing a good miss too?”
Again, what do you mean by a ‘good miss’? Generally and in a philosophic sense regarding the strategies of golf, bunkers are there to be challenged for a reward. Obviously they’re to be avoided but the ideal in golf is to challenge them, to come as close to them as possible for the thrill of dealing with their existence and placement, and yes danger, and to be rewarded for your success in just avoiding them.
As Max Behr mentioned in his excellent article “The Nature of Penalty" (in golf and architecture), bunkers or other hazard features should be there to encourage the golfer to do his best to take them on, to ‘shoot the bones for the whole works’, as he said. Behr also mentioned that bunkers and other hazard features (penalty areas) should not be there to remind a golfer when he has played badly---that, in Behr’s article, is the job of the golf professional and not the golf architect.
The golf architect should inspire the golfer to do his best, to challenge hazards and penalty situations. That creates greater interest in the game through architecture, and it creates greater interest in the shot at hand and it creates greater exhilaration in the achievement.
According to Behr this is architecture and golf from the positive side and not from the negative side of penalty for punishment’s sake only. To Behr, approaching the concept of hazards as simply penalty areas to punish poor shots is the architect acting too much the role of the “moralist”, and in his opinion that approach would tend to depress the golfer as it only reminds him of his short-comings.
Obviously, it’s clear to see that Behr’s explanations of the correct use of penalty in golf and architecture are somewhat of the “glass half empty/glass half full” type of analogy but given the choice why shouldn't the architect act the part of the optimist rather than the pessimist for the benefit of the golfer---eg to work to inspire optimism and not pessimism in the golfer?
Some occasionally seem to forget that in the end golf is supposed to be enjoyment and not an eternal penance.