Just to provide an example, your previous comment could have been written something like this: "Being honest though, the guy's commit messages changed my preconceptions about how reliable and well-designed his code will be."
No knowledge of statistics required, Bayesian or otherwise.
OK, fair enough, your suggestion is totally reasonable. However I've been referring to people's "priors" though in informal conversation for about 25 years, to friends, romantic partners, and family as well as academics and programmers, and I know several other people who do the same. Apart from anything else it's a nice non-technical sounding word. I'm not a Bayesian statistics zealot (I don't even work in statistics any longer). But I definitely think all educated people should be familiar with the _idea_ of Bayesian inference. I think that goes without saying. I'm no expert on such matters but clearly our own perception/cognition has some sort of Bayesian flavour to it (you think a mammal dimly perceived on the horizon is probably a dog etc). What I'm saying is -- it sound like perhaps you also have had some involvement with the academic subject -- I think you don't need to push that word quite so far away from mainsteam culture. It's perhaps even a little patronizing to mainstream culture? And I think that if we are ever going to overcome CP Snow's Two Cultures problem then making little gestures like this in the right direction is actually important; especially from people like you and me.
I'm familiar with many things Bayesian thanks :) However, I wouldn't assume everyone else is, even here.
Are you familiar with the meaning(s) of the word jargon? https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/jargon https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jargon
Just to provide an example, your previous comment could have been written something like this: "Being honest though, the guy's commit messages changed my preconceptions about how reliable and well-designed his code will be."
No knowledge of statistics required, Bayesian or otherwise.