Tom MacWood:
First of all, nobody is trying to paint Joshua Crane as some antichrist. We haven't said anything like that and either did Behr and MacKenzie et al, and I wish you could somehow learn not to say dumb and incendiary crap like that as well.
Behr and MacKenzie appear to have actually been friends of Crane. After-all they did say they spent a fortnight in St Andrews with him debating this very subject, and even if they appeared to be not that gentle with his mathematical formula and his theory for it, at least they seemed (from their writing) to be adequately gentlemanly towards him personally. Apparently none of them seemed to take criticism of ideas as personally directed as you seem to.
Obviously Behr and Mackenzie felt the gist of Crane's theory of trying to reduce golf and architecture to some mathematical formula of quality was dangerous to the very soul, spirit and essence of golf itself, and dangerous to the golfer himself and to golf architecture.
I hope we can regenerate that debate on here, and that's what I think I will try to do (with some preliminary prep-work such as getting what Crane and Behr and MacKenzie et al wrote about this on this website). And I hope we won't get bogged down in the pettiness of having to spend a week establishing what the precise definition of words and terms are or precisely why that debate was joined in the first place during that fortnight in St. Andrews in the 1920s. I hope we can get to what it was they were really concerned about for the future of golf and golf architecture.
They were certainly passionate and voluminous in their responses, certainly Behr was. So, it seems it must have had a bit more to do with something than just that Crane's formula had ranked TOC fourteenth (even to Crane's own apparent disappointment
).
While it's somewhat interesting to know that Crane stayed in some cottage at Sunningdale in the heart of that great burgeoning region of English Arts and Crafts power and influence, that really does seem pretty trivial to a debate on which road golf and architecture might turn down in the future which of course we now have the great benefit of analyzing because their future is our past and history.
That somewhat stillborn debate back then just could've been for the heart and soul and essence of what golf and its architecture is, or was, or perhaps should be. That appears to be what MacKenzie and certainly Behr thought and felt at that point in the 1920s.
I, for one, would like to regenerate that subject and that debate, and what it was really about. I know Bob Crosby would too, and probably GeoffShac and TommyN. Others in the damnedest places, some high places in golf today, say they would too.
Get ready TommyN, if you have management responsibilities on here, this may be your time.
This could be the best thread and discussion GOLFCLUBATLAS.com has ever had and the one who will appreciate it most just may be our leader, Ran Morrisett. He told me so himself.
I hope we can somehow get the raw material of the debaters on here in the next couple of days.
I think I'll call the thread; "A fortnight in St Andrews"......(that may've been the philosophical crossroads in the future of golf in the 20th century)