Originally posted by Buckwheaties:
"I wonder if the archers of old, flinging a quiver full of arrows at 100yds at a deer, had thoughts like are expressed here? I guess time changes ethics? I'll bet that over the last thousands of years of man taking game with a bow, thoughts of ethics were even nonexistent."
Well, hunter-gatherer cultures were supreme woodsmen of a type that didn't require making those shots. If you've ever made a primitive arrow from total scratch (shoot or cane shaft you had to cut-season-sand, fletching cut from a feather, stone point you knapped, sinew you processed and all this with stone tools), then you know one arrow could have several hours of work in it. You won't be just flinging those about at animals 100 yards away. Good arrows were labor-intensive. Hunter-gatherers wouldn't do that for two reasons:
1.) Too many lost arrows and too time-intensive to replace for little gain.
2.) Wouldn't hit the animal and easier to stalk, because you don't survive as a hunter culture without hunting skills that don't involve "spray-and-pray". "Spray-and-pray" is a modern construct. It doesn't have a hunter-gatherer equivalent.
Remember, these are folks that didn't live in chemical environments of modern soap, perfume, aftershave, laundry detergent, gasoline, oil, and what-not. Their odor didn't give them away, for one thing. For another, there was a lot more game back then than now. Remember, there was a time in this land a buffalo herd could take several days to pass a given point.
While they didn't have "ethics" per se as we know them, they did attach a religious reverence to the animals they hunted. The Plains tribes and the buffalo, for example. Certain right behavior and certain pre-hunt taboos were observed. Read Joseph Campbell.
That's not to say that there wasn't something called the "Buffalo Jump" where a herd of buffalo was stampeded off a cliff. But, again, there were religious ceremonies involved in that, too.
Yes, we call them "ethics" now. But take a look at some posts here. People have "lucky" bows or favorite bows or name their bows. People have this or that lucky talisman or doo-dad. There is nothing new under the sun. We're hunters.