Thanks, Shel - you brought the question down to where the rubber really hits the road, ie to specific courses, with particular members, at given times.
You know that world very well, from many angles/aspects, while I don't know it at all.
But from your post, I concluded (only partly in jest) that the history & dialectic of golf course renovations basically involves:
prior committees convincing then-members that what they didn't think was broken actually was, and current committees bringing architects in to convince present-day members they're dead wrong in thinking that nothing is broken --and (ironically, though implicitly) that previous members had been right all along!
So what happens, I wonder, when an unusually bright club member puts 2 and 2 together and asks the committee why *he* won't be right in 20 years too?
More generally: I can grant that a golf course design can be broken for some while not for others (just like a small dent in a car door doesn't bother one person but is intolerable to another). But if "being broken" is nothing more than a matter of consensus (or is that 'manufactured consent') and not based on some essential principles, how can any of these decisions really be made in good (and lasting) faith?
Thanks for the offer of a tour: that will be a genuine pleasure.
Peter