I disagree with you and John on this one Black Wolf, instinctive shooting is not defined just by the way the shooter addresses the target, and calling one's shots for the instinctive shooter is no more difficult than it is for a firearms shooter, or gap shooter.
For those of you who have not been around shooting sports for a longtime, "calling your shot" means an instant analysis, by the shooter, of why the bullet, or arrow went where it did, instead of where it should have gone.
In fact, if I shoot high, left or right I can tell you what I did wrong, that had nothing to do with my "instinctive aiming method", it has everything to do with the mechanics beyond what the bow hand is doing. For example, most release problems are nothing more than back tension problems, and or alignment problems.
Losing back tension for me results in an arrow high and right(I am a left handed shooter), an arrow low, is the result of me failing to follow through, shooting too quickly will result in a high arrow, because I palm the grip in those situations.
My bow hand is the what I point at the target, not the arrow. Yes, not only can I tell you why I missed, I can tell you if my string has stretch, my nocking point has moved, or if my string silencers have slipped.
Coming from a Military, and Police background, like my father, who was a expert marksman with a rifle. He taught me the importance of being able to call your shots. He said that it was key to becoming an exceptional shot, he was right. I may not hit the spot every time, but I can tell you why I missed, and that can go a long way to becoming a better shot. just the way I see it from here.