Bob,
I think golf courses have too many variables to be summarily quantifiable or standardized (I haven't found much consistency in slope and course ratings). The Crane essays didn't interest me.
I am not a proponent that every long hole should have a large green, or that a short hole must have small targets. I never suggested a strict set of rules that must be blindly followed without fail in golf course design. Golf is a very traditional game. People have expectations, more than that, requirements, that if A happens, B follows, at least most of the time. If it doesn't, chaos and all sorts of unusual behavior ensue. It is probably the reason why there are relatively few hole types and critics complain that there is little new in golf. Serendipity and rubs of the green in small dosages are good; Muirhead's shark jaw hole at Stone Harbor not so much.
Sean,
I am talking about golf. Didn't Richard Choi speak to balance in the "bunkers are too perfect" thread? And world traveler Michael Whitaker uses the lovely sentiment "Solving the paradox of proportionality is the heart of golf architecture" from Tom Doak as his signature. Yeah, I do think that balance and proportionality play a big part in gca.
You want random results? You'd be happy if your well-executed approach would end up next to the flag or carom into the hay 50 yards away? If you do, join GJ Bailey and go out as a two-some, hopefully, very far away from where I am playing.
How you play without a sense of cause and effect is puzzling, and really not what I've witnessed in our matches. Again, no one is advocating that if a shot is hit within X feet to the target it should come to rest in Y feet. One of the charms of golf is learning how to hit shots in varying conditions and the satisfaction one gains when, on occasion, it comes of as planned. Positive or negative reinforcement is effective, even when it is intermittent, so long as it is consistent. Perhaps the actual process of getting the ball from point A to point B is not as important to you as being out with your mates in the outdoors. It is to me.
As to what was advocated, against my better judgment, I was responding to a whacko making a ridiculous straw man argument (something about a constant ratio). I won't make that mistake again.