Frank
I can't seem to work by a set criterion such as yours. I find that I have to go with what the course offers in terms of its strengths. This means that the greens may be more important for one course than another....or the bunkering or the terrain or etc etc. Each course has its basic character and if we are lucky, there are courses which offer multiple characteristics (which is what I really mean by variety of design). I realize it does seem like flying by the seat of my troozers and that I will get ot wrong sometimes, but I always felt that a set criteria only reinforces a generally formed opinion anyway.
I agree with this wholeheartedly. Trying to come up with a set of criteria [and make all of the criteria equal!] leaves open the possibility of missing entirely what makes a particular course special. The course we've just finished at Forest Dunes is a great example of something that's more than the sum of its parts.
However, two of the criteria Frank mentioned get zero consideration in the Doak scale:
The first is history. History may mean a lot to some people, but it means nothing to others, so it's up to the people who value history to weigh that as an additional factor in deciding whether they want to see a course. Even then, I don't understand why they would factor history into whether they enjoyed the course or not.
The second is affordability / value. Don't get me wrong; the world is better off for having affordable courses. But everyone's idea of value is different, and everyone makes those decisions based on their own circumstances. If I rate one course a 5 and another a 7, that should be independent of MY idea of "value", so you can factor in your own thoughts on what's worth the green fee [and the travel expenses] based on an even comparison of the two courses' merits.
Conditioning is not as big a factor in my own ratings as several others, but it's in there ... not so much "the more, the better" but to the extent that it adds or detracts from the enjoyment of the game.