At the extreme, taking pictures where there is no light = lack of common sense.. lol
I agree that if the lighting is not naturally good, a good photographer does what is needed to CONTROL that aspect of it, if via extreme apertures or external off camera flash or chosing a better time of the day or location to get the shot, lighting is something we have a TON of control over and can change easily enough.
I've literally watched a photohrapher take 15 minutes to find the PERFECT angle, the PERFECT lighting, the PERFECT framing, the PERFECT background, subject pose and foreground... and then focus on a branch that was between the subject and his camera, causing his subject to be blurred and the entire work to go down the toilet. Yes, ideally we want all aspects of it... but if something as simple as not properly focusing on the subject is not assured, nothing else really matters, does it?