As a measure of what you should consider your personal maximum recoil tolerance from field positions, sure; if you can shoot 3 rounds well, you can handle it well enough to hunt with it. I could hold 3 shots prone from the .416, (350s ahead of 102 grs of H-4350) and 5 prone from the .375 Ultra (300s ahead of 92 grs of H-4350) was quite doable. Shooting from sitting with the .458, (short shank 500s ahead of 76 grs of H-335) I usually run out of ammo before I've had enough, but that M-70 is only a 3 shooter. None of these rifles were much over 9 lbs, the Ultra was 7 lbs with the factory stock, but the McMillan made it 9 as well. Watching myself shoot the Ultra prone in slow motion is an education. It looks as if the rifle drives my shoulder back 6", but it didn't feel as bad as it looked. I'd post it if I could figure out how, but my computer and my video camera aren't on speaking terms.
I fired as many as 5 rounds from prone with the .416, but it was a foolish exercise, with the same results each time, the 4th shot would hurt (every time), and while 5th shot didn't, my concentration wasn't there to break it cleanly. That's where I hit the wall and I lost the rifle before I could get beyond it.
When I was shooting the .500 Nitro, (580s over 89 grs of 3031) all the shooting was off hand, but after a dozen or so rounds with that 19th Century hard rubber pad, I'd had enough, and I harped the two triggers once to boot. The rifle might have been made in the 1920's but the rubber in that pad had to be a 100 years older than the rifle.