Not quite. New freedivers have not developed the ability to cope with the natural urge to breathe induced by elevated CO2, or learn to be as relaxed as experienced freedivers. It is difficult to burn enough Oxygen in a lung full of air to reach hypoxic levels without first reaching such high CO2 levels that untrained people experience severe distress or panic. Drowning from panic is not the same as SWB.
The first medical observation of this learned response (basically ignoring elevated CO2 symptoms) that I became aware of was by physiologists working with the US Navy UDT (Underwater Demolition Teams/Frogmen) after WWII. SWB that we know today was a relatively rare incident with the UDT since their objective was to swim long distances at shallow depths, thus the PPO2 effect was not so pronounced. Also, these subjects were in particularly excellent physical condition with above average cardio-pulmonary functions. Actual samples of exhalations were taken and compared between trainees and team members and the disparity was noted. The conclusion as I recall was that an increased CO2 tolerance was observed but no theory was offered to explain the phenomenon. My unsupported presumption was these guys just toughed their way though it like all the other discomforts of their career.
Considering that the phenomenon has relatively recently been observed and understood with anything resembling a significant frequency, it is reasonable to conclude that it has not been a problem for the thousands of years people have practiced casual diving apnea. The advent of advanced apnea techniques, long bladed fins, good thermal protection, and apnea diving becoming a competitive sport is when SWB has become common enough to observe, analyze, and accurately diagnose.
That is not what I wrote.
The operative word is usually. The point was that SWB (used as shorthand for all the flavors of hypoxia) is something that freedivers should become aware of. I felt it was appropriate to mention SWB during my first post, but not be an alarmist. Incorrect weight management is a far greater risk to new freedivers than SWB and is the question at hand.