"Lemme ax you some stuff. Is it possible for Nature to "offer" suggestio falsi or suppressio veri? Or is it down to our interpretation, in which case we cannot use Nature to judge either concept?
Mark:
Is it possible for Nature to "offer" suggestio falsi or suppression veri?
Sure, but not or, and---eg both! Could it really be otherwise? But if you or some golfer is just asking a question about this kind of thing regarding Nature and golf architecture I guess it depends if you're asking Tom Doak or Albert Camus.
Which brings it to your next question---eg 'or is it down to our interpretation'?
Now you are into my world of Max Behr. Offer in architecture and golf the ability for any golfer to think for himself whatever he wants and whatever he will. Don't try to limit with architecture any of that. Give him as much freedom as possible to think for himself and express for himself in what he does with his club and ball, foster his courage, not his fears.
"And what's your judgment of both concepts? Is one superior to the other? Did Behr write of the distinction?"
I think both concepts are cool, at least as I understand them, and I think both can and should be used in architecture. Why not?
"Is one superior to the other?"
Very good question, I'd probably have to think on that a long, long time and maybe go out and see if I could somehow actually categorize some of both on the ground and then just let my emotions regarding it supply the answer after a time.
"Did Behr write of the distinction?"
I'm not sure, but I can't exactly recall him making a distinction between such things but maybe I missed it---that is always very possible with Max Behr's writing.
I believe if he felt Nature supplied and offered both somehow he probably would've endorsed both in architecture as much as I am.
I believe Behr probably felt the best of golf was about two parts intelligence and about eight parts emotion. By intelligence he meant a golfer's ability to call upon experience. By emotion he seems to have meant fear and joy.
He appears to have believed that the golf architect who could produce the most of the latter in any golfer was a good or great architect and the one who produced a good deal of the former wasn't.