I thank hd for showing that graph which I should have done.
Now a bit of history the crossover slopes where chosen by THX. The idea was to have the speakers sealed, so they rolled of 12 db, then the electrical slope plus the acoustic roll off would be 24 db. Then with a 4th order low pass on the sub you would have 24 db high and low pass filters.
Of course this is not the way it turned out. Most speakers ended up ported with a 24 db per octave roll off. So the crossover is not correct.
That is why I like most UK speaker manufacturers do not advise the usually recommended US practice. If the speakers are capable they should not be crossed over, but the sub gently used to fill in at the natural roll off of the mains. The sub should handle the LFE signal up to 120 Hz. I have researched and measured this, and it does result in the best measurements without a lot less hassle, and subjectively it gives by far the best musical quality. The big draw back is that there are far too many speakers that are now incapable of being driven full range. However there are plenty that are. There is nothing adverse about using a high pass filter below box tuning to prevent useless driver excursion.
I personally believe changes to practice about bass management are warranted. Current practice is not optimal in my view, and I do not follow it, with excellent results.
I only follow it if the speakers are sealed, like my Eagan system where the center is sealed and the main speakers are integrated in one enclosure with the bass mids in sealed compartment and an integrated isobarik coupled cavity bass system that handles the low frequencies and the LFE. I agree that is another unusual approach. However I have good reasons for doing what I do.