Very interesting discussion.
One other aspect that I didn't see offered, it the length of time the person making the determination has been in archery.
To and old duff like me (I've been shooting archery since 1951) Fiberglass Laminates and Aluminum bows are the threshold of "New fangled".
I grew in archery that used different vernacular and considered the wooden long bow as traditional (real) archery.
Therefore, to me Primitive would include the bows of the type made by Native Americans of the 1800s and earlier.
You also can't define a bow by its efficiency. Some of the Turkish Horn bows were very efficient. Would you call them Traditional or Primitive??? Lots of gray areas here.
Where as, most of the younger archers have grown up in a world where the new fangled block and tackle bow was just a different type of bow.
I can see where they could referr to an older round cam compound by using the term traditional..... And, maybe the long bow as primitive.
Its all a matter of perspective. Here is a picture of the next generation of "new fangled" arrow shooter....
A nockless aluminum arrow is fitted over a tube in the barrel.... The makers claim 400 FPS with compressed air...
Who knows, maybe my grandson will call all arrowshooting devices that use stored muscle power as "Traditional or even Primitive Bows".
To sum up, to paraphrase another member's post, it is nice that archery has so many different tangents a person can explore, the bottom line is enjoyment of the sport.
Most people view from their own experience. This includes their interests, training and length of time in that field.
It is really as unimportant as the "Traditional" term for arrow stiffness testing being known a Spline, where the common "Present Day" term is Spine....
Tempest in a tea pot... Primitive... Cave Man Archery?? -> Any bow that doesn't use cams and levers??
I just can't see where there should be this much debate. Archery is for Everbody...
My 2 Cents
Steve