Standing on simplicity and being humble, walking steadily and making great progress comes from different works, and its meaning is as follows:
Standing on simplicity and being humble: comes from "Cai Gen Tan", a collection of aphoristic essays by Hong Yingming, a Taoist at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty. If you have a shallow experience in the world, your experience will be shallow; if you have a deep history, your mechanics will be deep. Therefore, a gentleman is worse than being simple and ruthless than being sophisticated; instead of being cautious, he is worse than being careless and arrogant. The explanation of "being simple and conservative" means that for a person who is simple in the world, he will have fewer bad habits; once a person's experience in the world deepens, the city will also deepen. Therefore, instead of being tactful, a gentleman should maintain a simple personality; instead of being cautious and compromising in everything, it is better to be open-minded so as not to lose his pure nature. The word "shouzhuo" comes from Tao Yuanming's "Returning to the Garden and Living in the Fields × Shaowu Suitable Rhymes" "Opening up the wilderness in the south, Shouzhuo returns to the garden and fields", which means clinging to stupidity, and stupidity is a word for self-effacing.
Be steady and far-sighted: a synonym for "obey orders and abide by the Tao", which comes from "The Harmony between Heaven and Man": "Think about things and oneself, and then know the best. Abide by the orders and abide by the Tao, and heaven and man will be in harmony with each other." Ke: Strictly abide by . The original meaning of "Ke" is "愙", which means respect, reverence, and prudence, such as abide by, abide by, be cautious, etc. Fate: life, life, destiny, command, instruction, such as following orders, obeying orders, mission, etc.