Our brains want everything to make sense or they rebel, at some level.
If we were twisting the "volts" knob on a power supply and watching the output meter, we'd surely like the pot to sit at about 12 o'clock when the supply is cranking out half its rated output. We would want the proportionality of the pot's rotation to match the range of operation it is supposed to trace out. It would, in contrast, bug us if we turned the knob 10% off zero on (say) a 0-100 VDC power supply and the meter was reading 40 volts. This would happen because we are looking at this linear output (meter) scale with our eyes and formulating this scheme of things where the more we turn the knob, the higher the output. It would bother us if the supply reached 100 volts before the midpoint of the pot's rotation. It would bug us if we could not get good adjustability because upper end of the voltage range was crammed into the last 15% of the pot's rotation.
Audio pots are formulated to create a resistance curve that can drive a circuit non-proportionally to the rotation of the pot, because we don't have that linear output readout...we have instead our sensitivity to volume levels, which is far from linear. There are of course reverse-audio taper pots, and I happen to believe that this is very frequently not notated on many schematics, nor is it much discussed. On a Super Reverb, both tremolo pots are reverse audio. It's in some ways a matter of "programming"; the designer of the circuit wanted to make the user feel like when user twists the knob, there is a perceivable effect.
As Chubby Checker once said, "I twist, thus I exist".