Those are nice drivers, but it seems like some odd design choices - at least from my perspective. Why would you go high order on the woofer? The peerless poly woofers are smooth as can be, no breakup of any sort, and hence can be used with a simple 1st order and a Zobel. The rising response is due to the low inductive rise, because of the good motor with plenty of copper - the hump around 3300 hz is not a breakup.
Personally (not that it means anything) but I'd think a 1st order Series network around 2400hz would be perfect for those drivers ... or Parallel network if you're wanting to make it n00b friendly.
That gives the smoothest response. The woofer needs a higher order of cut than the tweeter. If you go second order on the woofer and first on the tweeter, then the tweeter is driven to its resonance.
I played with this a long time, and I found that combination gives the smoothest axis ans off axis response.
It is still a pretty simple crossover. The responses of the two drivers with that circuit are extremely symmetrical.
A first order network for both drivers would be hopeless and sound awful.
First order crossover are so often "fools gold". The problems relate to getting a smooth crossover.
Also few drivers have the bandwidth to use them. Take tweeters for instance. With only 6db per octave roll off you have to start the crossover at 5KHz, otherwise the tweeter has too much power in its out of band response. You need to have tweeters about 24db down at resonance ideally, if you want nice smooth sound. The use of first order filters, actually ends up making for the most complex circuits, as Thiel found out and so did I in the eighties. I did a first order crossover design and it took 10 years R & D. When all is said and done the speakers are useful as monitors where the listening is predominantly going to be done by one listener, because despite all the apparent advantages you end up with a very suboptimal lobing pattern. In other words very much a sweet spot speaker. This is obviously less than ideal for HT.
Not that you should be Cavalier about phase and time, I don't believe. Unlike WmAx I do believe you should minimize the trespass you make with phase and time, compatible with the smoothest mid band response. I think you will have to agree though the phase response of those drivers and that crossover are far from extreme.
There is nothing wrong with being a full ranger at heart. I keep JW modules on hand for reference, and have a set in some TLs, I have used for years for a reality check.
One of the things that stays on my list to do, is start a JW website, less lessons once learned get forgotten.