Laozi's teaching on time as natural unfolding applies to how rushed development accumulates ethical liabilities in code.
The Tao Te Ching speaks of time as natural process: haste creates imbalance. Technical debt—shortcuts taken for speed—becomes a moral problem through the Confucian lens. When engineers prioritize velocity over craftsmanship (gong), they violate the virtue of diligence and create systems that harm future users. Laozi teaches that the sage works with time's grain, not against it. A virtuous development team practices temporal restraint: they refuse to force completion, they allow proper testing and reflection, they trust that sustainable pace serves better than sprint-driven exhaustion. This honors both the Taoist respect for natural rhythm and Confucian commitment to excellence and duty. Technical debt becomes a measure of broken li—when present convenience sacrifices future harmony. The paradox: slower development, pursued with integrity, often reaches users faster and safer.
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