Or, Adam, might not the golf course be the *lead* actor - the most important character of all? The title role? The 'Macbeth' in Macbeth, with all the rest of us/all other characters merely bit players strutting around and finding our places only in relation to this one 'star'? Laurence Olivier as King Lear - with Lear's *nature*, his essential character, being the very engine of the narrative, driving the lives and fates of every other character in the story. (Ah, like flies to wanton boys are we to the gods - they kill us for their sport!) Brando in/as The Godfather: asking, cajoling, threatening, demanding, dictating, making us offers that we can't refuse -- just nickels and dimes that jingle in his pocket.
Yes, yes indeed I think: great courses are designed by great architects to be all things: the star, the dramatic engine, and the centre around which golfers weave their own tales of sound and fury. Mediocre courses, on the other hand, were designed as merely pretty backgrounds and a set of props -- all to enable 3rd rate character actors to take centre stage for a rare few hours and hope to really shine! (Look ma - I made it to Broadway!!) Isn't that precisely what Ian A was complaining about in his "pandering" thread?
Oh, there are "basics" all right, to golf course architecture, and principles and even rules that should never be broken except on the rarest occasion and only by masters of the craft -- but it's becoming clear that architects simply won't put them down in black and white.
Peter
PS - thanks Bob and Tom, just saw your posts. Well, with Tom's post we have 3 basics!