So don't folks think there is any difference between gaining information and knowledge through experience is any different than being gifted the information and knowledge of experience?
Of course there's a difference. And the former is better than the latter.
But that's not the choice on offer. Tom is proposing that those without information and knowledge gained through experience have various (attempted) nuisances and barriers erected to prevent them from being "gifted" any information about the course. Which of course is typical Treehouse wish-fulfillment wankery masquerading as a thought experiment.
The best players I know prefer to learn about a course over multiple practice rounds, rangefinder in hand, making their own notes about the course and attempting various shots from situations they may encounter in a competitive round. If that is not available, they will settle for one practice round and a detailed yardage book. If that is not available they will settle for whatever markers are on the course plus pacing around until they've gained as much distance information as possible without causing an uprising on the part of their fellow competitors or officials.
If a skilled player looks at the hole before he hits the shot, on average he will hit it closer than if he wears a blindfold. If a skilled player knows how far his ball lies from the hole he will hit it closer on average than if he has to guess the distance. If a skilled player has played the hole twenty times before he will hit it closer on average than if he's just off the boat playing the course for the first time. All of these are simply, empirical facts. Wishing them not to be so has no effect on objective reality.
I'm not a skilled player. I play many rounds where my knowledge of distance on most shots is vague at best. In all likelihood even an unskilled player like myself hits the ball slightly less close to the hole and therefore shoots slightly higher scores than I could do by measuring distances but frankly many times I'm not out there to shoot the lowest score possible (if I were I would trade in about a third of my rounds for practice-range sessions).
But you guys aren't talking about people
playing like Sean prefers to play (and Melvyn and Ralph and ostensibly Tom H. although I don't believe that for a moment). What you're talking about is trying to come up with Rules to [expletive deleted] with the heads of the guys who actually are trying to shoot the lowest scores possible. And that is a fool's errand.