Tom M.-
This is probably a thread that I shouldn't be touching with a 10' pole, but here it goes anyways. BTW, I don't think that you were necessarily speaking to me in your comments, but it is cold here in Texas and I have the time to respond.
I don't personally care if people dislike like the work of Fazio, Nicklaus, the Jones family, etc. What I have objected to in the past is the often brutal personal attacks against many of the modern architects. There is little if any similar personal criticism of their predecessors, which, given that there are many, many crappy old courses, at least suggests that a bias or double-standard exists.
You are absolutely right, golf is a lot about tastes, preferences, opinions. The detailed analysis you seem to desire so much, the intellectual repartee if you will, is about something that often defies that treatment. Golf is a near religion to many people for a variety of reasons. I dare to say that architecture, the definition of which is not all that well understood or defined, is but one aspect of golf that interests people.
Personally, in addition to golf, I enjoy politics, economics, business, and travel. The subjects that I choose to address on this site tend to have an element of these as they relate to golf and golf architecture. I doubt that my love for and interest in golf are any lesser than yours. But my orientation toward the game is not with obssessing about artistic or irregular/natural bunker design, elephant burial grounds for green complexes, or holes specifically called Redan, Biarritz, Alps, or Cape. I do know what I like in a golf course, and play well enough to personally understand strategy and shot values.
Though I may not be as smart as you are, I don't think that I am lazy. I greatly admired your Arts & Crafts piece, but I would never have the interest in researching that subject matter. I can spend a couple of days at El Prado or the Guggenheim (sp) and enjoy the works of Goya, El Greco, Picasso, etc., but I don't have a great interest in the detailed characteristics of their brush strokes (though I do enjoy learning the autobiographical highlights of their lives). I have read and own a large number of the golf architecture books discussed on this site, but I can't say that very many provide me inspired reading. Yet, I can tell you without a doubt that if I ever have the opportunity to play the likes of Cypress Point, Pine Valley, National Golf Links, Shinnecock Hills and Seminole it will be like being in heaven. I many not be able to tell you why in finite detail, but the experience is what matters, not the ability to articulate it.