I don't want to argue with a respected cuemaker such as yourself, but one can flatten out a curve with a "long X" and "short Y", and much of the curve will look extremely "straight". One way to think of these curves is as conic-sections. A cone that is tall but has a small base diameter will result in curves that are fairly sharp (very curvy). A cone that is short with a large base diameter will result in a very "flat" curve, more in line with an "ideal" curve for a shaft taper.
http://math2.org/math/algebra/conics.htm has some pictures that may help.
Now for an idea from a non-cuemaker, but one who has great interest in this type of discussion :
There is a very special type of a curve called a "catenary". This is the shape that a string takes when suspended from both ends. The curve is such that the entire string is in pure tension, no shear whatsoever. The curve is used for arches as well, and it the curve most used for the blades in a Darius-type vertical windmill (the egg-beater). It turns out that this curve is a hyperbolic-cosine, a curve that looks very similar to a parabola (even fooled Galileo). Anyone who thinks it might be interesting to make a parabolic-taper cue shaft may also be interested in making a catenary-taper cue shaft as this curve should have more natural interest. A similar linear interpolation technique could be used to create the G-code.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catenary
There are a couple of catenaries in the above link that well illustrate a flat (Capilano suspension bridge) versus a sharp (Gateway Arch in St. Louis) curve.
Dave