
Carl Jung’s 12 Laws — Rewritten for Software Engineers (With Real-Life Tech Examples)
Carl Jung’s 12 Laws — Rewritten for Software Engineers (With Real-Life Tech Examples) How analytical psychology can help you write better code, collaborate smarter, and survive software chaos. Software engineering looks purely technical from the outside. But anyone who has actually worked in the field knows the truth: Software is built by humans, and humans are psychological systems — not machines. This is where Carl Jung becomes surprisingly relevant. Jung’s principles, created a century ago, map almost perfectly onto the daily struggles of developers today. Below, you’ll find Jung’s core psychological laws reinterpreted for software engineers, each paired with a concrete example from real engineering life. 1. The Law of Psychological Types Original: People operate as introverts or extroverts and use thinking, feeling, intuition, or sensation as their dominant function. Software Version: Not every engineer thinks like you — don’t expect identical reasoning patterns. Example: Your team
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