Paul,
You are a great salesman, adept at painting word images we can all understand.......
Mike,
I think of GCA fundamentals as being good in drainage, etc. That's where so many people building golf courses now are, to me, just playing in the dirt. As far as strategic design theories, I guess you could call the conventions that most of us closely follow fundamentals, but thats not quite the right concept. If I figure out what the right concept is, I'll let you know.
I like hockey better than basketball because players do stay in a teamwork mode to a greater degree than I see in the NBA or major college ball. I recall watching Bobby Knights 1976 era Hoosiers dismantle opponents with talent (although none of his stars were huge in the NBA) and teamwork - I don't think I ever saw them take more than a ten foot jumper after several crisp passes. Do we see that any more? I don't know, because all I watch is hockey.
Joe,
I know you are being faceitious to a degree, but I certainly don't think that gca can be done solely by formula and without thinking. Unlike building architecture, where the same toilet or doorknob can be used repetively, unique land forms makes most green designs a unique challenge.
It takes talent and much thought to apply fundamental (okay, maybe it is the right word) design theory to those unique sites and make it all work. At least, I have rarely been able to "mail it in" and make it right. Maybe other guys are smarter than me.
Having a fairly strong set of principals - whether minimalism, maximalism, or any stop in between, effectively reduces the number of options we might consider as gca's from infinite to a mere three dozen or so for each design problem.
And it may be great marketing to say you start completely fresh on each site, but in reality, its a difficult thing to do. Not impossible, since I still get excited at every new project to, for example, review bunker styles to match the site rather than doing the samo samo. In other ways - like deciding to build a 2000 SF green, its not so good. And, after building several courses, I wouldn't want to ignore lessons learned.
But that constitutes higher level thinking, not no thinking, IMHO.