Certainly proceeding on a formulaic route and ignoring the land will yield a bad result. However, Hunter, Thomas, MacKenzie and others wrote about "ideal" courses; Hunter, in fact, cited Braid's plan for an ideal course.
Thomas wrote, "It is advisable to give a good get-away, and not to have a one-shot hole, or a short two-shotter, in the first three holes."
Other than evidence based on actual holes constructed, is anyone aware of any architects who expressed a view that was explicitly contradictory to Thomas' beliefs? It might be something as straightforward as "Par is irrelevant; you gotta do what you gotta do." It would, however, be interesting to learn if anyone was a PROPONENT of the idea.