Tom Mac,
Leave it to you to elevate this discussion to a higher plane with a reference to Darwin! I am not at all sure that we are more sensitive to critique now, as I simply can't channel all the guys who went before. I bet Ross got the same star treatment and good reviews as the superstar of his day that say, Fazio generally gets now. If its magnified, I think its just because the media has expanded so much. I could be wrong.
And I don't think ASGCA has ever changed its position on members critiquing members publicly and in a way to get work away from them for themselves. I think that principle statement was in the original by laws, written in 1946 or 7 and apparently endorsed by Ross, Bell and some other old guys.
Jeff
No doubt Ross got the star treatment, especially later in his career. Macdonald got the star treatment too, so did Tillinghast and MacKenzie, but that did not prevent them from criticizing or being criticized.
In 1919 there was interesting article written about Ross's criticism of American golf architecture and its infatuation with length entitled 'Criticises golf courses'.
"Seventy percent of the courses in Great Britain are under 6,000 yards, and some of the finest links in the world are over there. In this country there seems to be a desire for length: The result is that we see layouts 6,500 yards long, and some of them will not begin to compare with courses a thousand yards shorter."
I'd love to read the original code of conduct for the ASGCA...if they had one. I'd be surprised if they prohibited criticism.
Restaurants, movies, paintings, buildings, music, literature are all critically reviewed. Shouldn't golf architecture be held to the same standard?
Why shouldn't golf architects criticize other architects? Golf architects often criticize the work of their contemporaries privately...it takes a certain amount of self confidence (and guts) to critisize them publicly...one of the consequences being you expose your own work to critical review.
That is the way it should work IMO...a very healthy situation.