I too know it's just a game....
Peter --
I politely but firmly disagree.
All of us, including Rich, know that, at least for us, golf is not just a game (or a sport, for that matter, if you prefer -- a discussion that interests me not in the least bit [see below]).
And all of us, including Rich, know that a golf course is not just a collection of holes. A golf course is, or at least can be, a work of both art and craft.
But, speaking for myself only: I'm not sure that my own experience of golf is enhanced much, if at all, by digging deeper into the whys of that art-making, or by contextualizing it (whatever that means; no offense intended).
Words are as inadequate as photographs to capture the essence of the best golf courses.
I remember, back in high school, when a teacher said he considered me an "intellectual." I politely but firmly disagreed -- and told him so. And I was right.
It seems to me that there's a clear dividing line here: Those of you who go on past (c) to (d) and (e) are the intellectuals of the group, at least when it comes to golf.
To paraphrase the much-missed Tom Paul: It takes lots of kinds to make a world.
Dan
P.S. I became a golfer because my Dad (a once-in-a-blue-moon, mostly business golfer) gave me a Rawlings 6-iron for Christmas when I was about 10, and some plastic golf balls that I loved to swat around the yard, with the "holes" being various tree trunks.
I loved every ball sport. Still do. Golf is the best of them, because, unlike the others, (a) your wrecked old body will still allow you to play it decently, and (b) it takes you to beautiful places, with very good company.