404 Not Found

The requested URL was not found on this server.

We suggest you turn to the Tao Teh Ching:

38

The man of superior [scholar] virtue is hardly (conscious of his) virtue,
and so he is virtuous.
Superior virtue is hardly (conscious of) its virtue. [Or could it be
that superior virtue is hardly virtue at all?]
The high-standing man hardly ever shows off the has some supreme powers
or prowess deep inside himself. He keeps such powers, and in this way
he really owns virtue.
The man of low virtue is hardly losing virtue, and so he is devoid of
virtue. The man of low virtue can lose sight of some virtue by never
losing sight of it. Rather low or indecent power" can't get rid of the
appearance of being some power'; [There's no scoffed, angrily sulking
Messiah power'].
No one thinks a man of highest calibre acts. No one thinks he ever acts
with ulterior motives.
The man of low virtue acts from himself, and very often with an ulterior
motive - and is so regarded -
The man of super-kindness also acts, but with no irksome, ulterior
motives. But all folks never think the superman acts.
The man of superior justice acts but has no ulterior motive to do so,
and maybe with an ulterior motive, as he who is best in ritual acts not
merely acts. (Yes, when) the man of superior morality acts and finds
no response, he rolls up his sleeves and stretches his arms or advances
upon them to force it on others.
So:
Only when dao is lost does [said] virtue arise. When [spoken-of]
virtue is lost, only then does [a parade of] kind humanity rise. Such
good kindness is lost, then (comes some sort of or endorsement of)
just moral: When humanist riches deep inside are lost, only then comes
[conform, outer-directed] normal righteousness. When righteousness is
lost, only then propriety pops up.
[And now it stands up: Boss-given, endorsed] morality can be the thinning
out of loyalty and honesty of heart and the start of chaos. [Inner,
hearty] morality lost, then propriety or semi-ritual. So [much] ritual
endorsement could be the mere husk of loyalty and promise-keeping. [And
so, all in all,] good, seemly propriety is a superficial expression of
loyalty and faithfulness, and the start of chaos or disorder.

Those who are the first to know, let words of dao flower, and in the
end it's an origin of folly. From this the great or noble man dwells in
the solid, heavy and thick (base), and not in the superficial or thinned
(end). Yes, he dwells in reality, which is a fruit, and not in the show
of appearances, or flowering (expression).
Therefore he rejects the one and accepts the other.
     -- tr. T. Byrn