I'm pretty sure you've never used a language with a good type system then.
You describe a system where you have to keep everything a program is doing that's relevant in your head at once, and when you're forced out of that state, it's catastrophic. You seem to be assuming that's the only way to get productive work done while programming. I happen to know it's not.
If a language has a sufficiently good type system, it's possible to use the compiler as a mental force multiplier. You no longer need to track everything in your head. You just keep track of minimal local concerns and write a first pass. The compiler tells you how that fails to work with surrounding subsystems, and you examine each point of interaction and make it work. There is no time when you need the entire system in your head. The compiler keeps track of the system as a whole, ensuring that each individual part fits together correctly. The end result is confidence in your changes without having to understand everything at once.
So why cram everything into your brain at once? Human brains are notoriously fallible. The more work you outsource to the compiler, the less work your brain has to do and the more effectively that work gets done.
You describe a system where you have to keep everything a program is doing that's relevant in your head at once, and when you're forced out of that state, it's catastrophic. You seem to be assuming that's the only way to get productive work done while programming. I happen to know it's not.
If a language has a sufficiently good type system, it's possible to use the compiler as a mental force multiplier. You no longer need to track everything in your head. You just keep track of minimal local concerns and write a first pass. The compiler tells you how that fails to work with surrounding subsystems, and you examine each point of interaction and make it work. There is no time when you need the entire system in your head. The compiler keeps track of the system as a whole, ensuring that each individual part fits together correctly. The end result is confidence in your changes without having to understand everything at once.
So why cram everything into your brain at once? Human brains are notoriously fallible. The more work you outsource to the compiler, the less work your brain has to do and the more effectively that work gets done.