The problem isn’t so much what the group thinks as much as it’s who the group allows to speak.
More random thoughts.
I've been trying to figure out where subjectivity and objectivity fit into groupthink and consensus. Naturally, Louis Armstrong plays a key role.
The one course where the consensus opinion differs most greatly from my personal experience is the Old Course at St. Andrews. I had a wonderful time playing the course with the three traveling Americans I was paired with. I had a good caddie and played a 6,000ish yard course quite well. I remember a few of the shots I hit as well. I thought the course was very nice, a wonderful 3.7 hour round at the break of day.
On the same trip I played North Berwick with two friends I deeply admire. None of us had seen the course. All of us had a great time. I would summarize my sentiments about North Berwick as amazing or spectacular. My impression was that both were great courses, but I clearly liked North Berwick better.
Some here know that a few years ago I redirected my attention from being a golf course dilettante to a popular music dilettante. One thing you learn when reading music criticism is that virtually everyone agrees that Louis Armstrong is the most important popular musician of the 20th century. Not only the greatest instrumentalist, but also the greatest vocalist. I think it was Stanley Crouch who said in the Ken Burns Jazz documentary that singing changed forever after Armstrong, and going back to the old way of singing was simply a bad choice. Similarly, the opening trumpet flourish of "West End Blues" is famous and groundbreaking. My Dad first mentioned that song when I was just a kid.
In these unique cases, an artist or a golf course is so important to the entire development of an art form or a game that its importance must be considered in its evaluation. I trust the consensus opinion of The Old is deserved because its importance in the game's history is undeniable, but I don't otherwise think I would rank it in my top 50 courses, among a relatively small sample size compared to many well-traveled members here.
Finally, I'd like to mention something that JC Jones said recently. JC considers the Loop a top 50 course in the U.S. Perhaps a truly reversible course is not an innovation that changes the course of history, but it's a big leap in design and this post suggests that JC is making a good argument.