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Doctor says: My job is meaningful because I save lives.
Programmer says: My job is meaningful because I... umm... write DB queries?!

Are you proud of being a programmer? Do you think that your work has positive effect on people's well being?

Or you just happen to do programming because you have bills to pay...

Note: Similar to this question from a few months ago.

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Find out what you enjoy doing, do that for a living, and adjust your lifestyle to match its income.

It is a paraphrase quote but I cannot remember by who.

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Programmers solve puzzles.

We handle things which are too complex for most people to keep straight -- not necessarily too complicated for them to understand, but, complicated enough that they don't want to mess with them. They discover problems to which we can sometimes provide solutions.

Some solutions help people (medical, educational), some hurt people (spam, phishing), some are gray area doing good, bad, and not much all at once (Grand Theft Auto?), some are academic exercises (code for code's sake that may advance theory and might end up in any other solution later).

The thing that makes me proud is that, if I do it right, I'm solving a problem that may never need to be solved again, building a path between a question and an answer that didn't exist (or wasn't available) before. A clean, reusable solution that other programmers can then take for granted as a stepping stone toward their goals. (In practice things must often be redone, but, ideally, not too often and maybe the essence of my solution can survive and all that needs to be done is to, say, translate the language.)

A daunting puzzle is replaced with an elegant solution.

Hopefully I choose to provide solutions that help educate kids, save lives, etc. instead of those that help rob old people, exploit the poor, et al. If so, I get the sense that I've done something good myself, and that it might make the next good thing that much easier for the next guy. Even coding for a good cause (say, routing ambulances), if done badly, can do much more harm than good. The idea is to be good at the craft and do it for good reasons. When you feel like your work isn't helping anyone (or that it is helping only really evil types) or you feel like you're doing the same thing over and over again (why should you need to re-solve what's now solved?) then it's time for a change.

Programming pays bills, for which I'm very grateful. It helped me buy a house, and provide for my family. If it didn't pay bills, I wouldn't program, but I think I would still solve puzzles (I'd be a mechanical, electrical, or structural engineer, a teacher, an astronomer, a physicist, ... whatever could let me use my mind and still pay enough to keep my family fed, clothed, and sheltered).

Each solution we share has the potential to advance us all.

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I've been a doctor and a programmer. Neither one is more or less meaningful than the other. (This is offered as personal experience without debate).

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Programming as a profession? Sure, just as the examples given illustrate. Any given programmer's current projects? That is another matter. In my five years I have personally yet to work on a project that made a quantifiable difference in the lives of its stakeholders. I wish I wrote software that saved lives or caught bad people, but society is lucky that I don't.

Having said that, I made the mortgage and child-support payments this month. Plenty of meaning in that.

Having said that, I have been incubating a restructuring plan that might allow me to sustain the substantial paycut involved in changing career fields.

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Programming is a meaningful profession just because this human being is a programmer.

Think a bit about it before you vote me either up or down.

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Instead of arguing whether programming is meaningful tell people what it means to you if you are proud of it! Maybe you could come up with a good grounding story about how you got involved in it all would help people understand or at least accept. Be sure they get a sense of your passion and accomplishments!

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I am the software engineer for an Environmental Protection Department. I participate in and enable the execution of environmental protection. I feel good about that because it has meaning.

But it doesn't have to be a quote, unquote, noble endeavor to have meaning. Not to pick on game developers (I play), but they should have meaning to. They provide entertainment. This is good.

If you can only find evil in you practice, would I say that it has no meaning, well... perhaps that is a meaning in and of itself.

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I'm a doctor, and my job is meaningful because I cut flesh with a scalpel?

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Many new features of the current world made by programmers: Internet, open source, torrents. Sometimes I say that future is already here, in our programming world.

Yes, I'm proud to be a programmer! We move our world a bit higher!

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Well, you could probably tell that doctor, that your job helps saves lives too, because without software the health system would fall apart.

You name it, we produce software for it!

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I have spent over a decade creating health promotion software that I know has a direct, beneficial impact on the companies that adopt it. After all, to sell our package we need to document its effectiveness to justify the investment.

So, yes, I think there is little question that programming can be meaningful!

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Are you proud of being a programmer?

Yes. I think being a programmer is a cool profession, like being a bebop saxophonist or something.

Do you think that your work has positive effect on people's well being?

No. Because at work I work on "enterprise" business software that that helps to drive the engines of capitalism. I don't think that has a positive effect on the world.

At home, as a hobby, though, I program music and art applications. I don't know whether this has a positive effect on others' well-being, but it makes me feel better.

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Being a programmer means you get to post stuff on Stackoverflow.com What more could you want?

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If they wouldn't pay me, I'd do it for free.

or

The code is free, you pay for documentation.

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You can certainly make the argument that professions like Doctors are more "meaningful" than ones like Programming (not an argument I would make myself, but I can see the rationale there.)

I've worked on enough projects at enough places that some of them I thought I was really doing good in the world and others where I was vaguely offended to be helping the client make money.

However, I'm one of those people who got into programming because I really like it. No matter what the project or the company, programming is how I want to spend my time, and the ability to pay the bills doing something you genuinely love is a rare thing, and I think it puts me (and most of the other programmers I've ever met) well ahead of the curve. A lot of people don't even have the option to do a job they really enjoy, and sure, those Doctors might have a more "meaningful" job, and those lawyers might be making more money, but if they got into those gigs because their parents wanted them to "make something of themselves," I'll take my low-fi custom web apps over that any day.

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If you trace it to its source, almost all private-sector employment has as its ultimate purpose the further enrichment of a small number of wealthy old white men. But very few of us get out of bed in the morning and think "I'm sure looking forward to making a few more bucks for Warren and Charlie today."

We find meaning in other things. In a lot of jobs, you can spin yourself a positive story about what your work brings to other people. But there are plenty of jobs (in organized semi-criminal enterprises like offshore gambling or auto insurance, say) where that's a challenge.

In my experience, the intellectual curiosity that makes someone a good programmer is also a way to derive meaning. There is pleasure to be found in learning, and in doing things well, and in learning to do things better. I've survived jobs of astonishing dullness simply by engaging with the problem of continuous improvement. (When I've found myself in a job that I couldn't make better, and that wasn't teaching me anything, that's always been a sign that it's time for me to move on.)

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There are several ways to attack this issue.

First, the question not a fair comparison. As somebody else said, you're comparing the doctor's end result with a programmer's minute-to-minute drudge work. At any random moment a doctor is more likely to be doing paperwork or telling somebody with a cold to say "ah", than they are to literally be saving a life. And not all doctors are specialists who "save lives" -- most just taking care of ordinary people day to day. (Not to belittle doctors, who have my ultimate respect, a truly honorable and necessary profession.)

Second, we should reject the notion that everybody needs to be doing something like saving lives. As long as you're not hurting anybody, it's ok to have a job that is "merely" intellectually interesting and does something that somebody finds useful. In fact, if everybody was a doctor and spent all their time "saving lives", it would be pretty boring, because nobody would be actually doing or making anything, or thinking about anything other than medicine. You wouldn't have games to play, or a house to live in, or a school to go to, or a book to read. (That's not to say that all jobs are useful for society, either -- plenty of jobs, if they disappeared, would make the world better for the rest of us.)

Third, programming jobs vary greatly in the impact they have on the world. Some programmers are putting robots on other planets, mapping the human genome, making visual effects for movies, allowing you to listen to music on devices that fit in your pocket, letting you easily search the world's databases, analyzing data on the latest cancer drug, letting ordinary folks do their own taxes, whatever.

If you don't think YOUR programming job has enough of a positive impact on the world or helps enough people, get off your butt and find a different programming job that does. It's not your choice of profession that's the limiting factor, but it may be your choice of employer (or project).

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Karma Yoga

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Technology is the only meaningful direction for humanity.

Economics just defines the speed for technology, since they see it as a resource to exploit.

Medicine saves lives, it does not save humanity. Technology will save us as a specie.

Social sciences investigate the problems of us humans, but this is like treating the symptom and not the cause (the cause being poverty, overcrowding, persecution etc.)

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Society as we know it today wouldn't exist without programmers. Somebody has to invent all that fancy technology (OK, engineers did most of that, not programmers), and write code to make it work (that's definitely us)! So yes, I feel we are a very important profession!

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I'm glad to see a lot of people vacationing at the Oasis of Self-Preservation, but here's the thing: Doctors do not save lives, they prolong lives. You save your life by making your life a turning point of some kind. As with programmers and smart bombs, doctors are not going to be feeling too good about themselves if they're in a situation where they consistently treat people they abhor.

Having said that I have to say though that in reality doctors have more control over who they treat than programmers have over how their software gets used.

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LOL your doctor is stupid. One could say all he does is serve medicine and write prescriptions (very untrue I know).

As said, programmers are responsible for so much in the world. In fact, he takes it all for granted. I am sure he has a PC in his office, and some doctors even look at the internet for information on rare conditions! Programmers have been pretty critical to the development of the internet...

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I am a software engineer, not a programmer.

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