Plain
Seneca — The Senator

People say philosophers don't practice what they preach. That's true. But they still do enormous good through their teaching and the noble ideas they create. I wish they could live up to their words — imagine how happy they would be! But you have no right to dismiss good advice and hearts full of wisdom. People deserve praise for studying worthwhile things, even if they never achieve perfect results. Why should we be surprised that people who try to climb a steep mountain don't make it to the top? If you're human, respect those who attempt great things, even when they fail. It shows a generous spirit to aim not just for what you can do, but for what humanity at its best might achieve. It's noble to set lofty goals and make plans so ambitious that even geniuses couldn't fully complete them. These great souls set rules for themselves like this:

On the Happy Life, Section 20 63 of 101
Knowing Yourself Doing The Right Thing
Seneca — The Senator Original

"Philosophers do not carry into effect all that they teach." No; but they effect much good by their teaching, by the noble thoughts which they conceive in their minds: would, indeed, that they could act up to their talk: what could be happier than they would be? but in the meanwhile you have no right to despise good sayings and hearts full of good thoughts. Men deserve praise for engaging in profitable studies, even though they stop short of producing any results. Why need we wonder if those who begin to climb a steep path do not succeed in ascending it very high? yet, if you be a man, look with respect on those who attempt great things, even though they fall. It is the act of a generous spirit to proportion its efforts not to its own strength but to that of human nature, to entertain lofty aims, and to conceive plans which are too vast to be carried into execution even by those who are endowed with gigantic intellects, who appoint for themselves the following rules:

On the Happy Life, Section 20 63 of 101
Seneca — The Senator

You say that no one lives up to their own teachings or follows the standards they preach. But why is that surprising? The words they speak are brave and strong — words that could survive any storm that destroys people. Yet the speakers themselves are struggling to escape from crosses where they've hammered in their own nails. At least people who are crucified hang from just one cross. But those who torture themselves are stretched across as many crosses as they have desires. Still, they love to criticize others. They act so superior when judging other people's faults that you'd think they had no faults of their own — except that even criminals on the gallows sometimes spit on the crowd watching them die.

On the Happy Life, Section 19 62 of 101
Human Nature Knowing Yourself
Seneca — The Senator Original

You say that no one acts up to his professions, or lives according to the standard which he sets up in his discourses: what wonder, seeing that the words which they speak are brave, gigantic, and able to weather all the storms which wreck mankind, whereas they themselves are struggling to tear themselves away from crosses into which each one of you is driving his own nail. Yet men who are crucified hang from one single pole, but these who punish themselves are divided between as many crosses as they have lusts, but yet are given to evil speaking, and are so magnificent in their contempt of the vices of others that I should suppose that they had none of their own, were it not that some criminals when on the gibbet spit upon the spectators.

On the Happy Life, Section 19 62 of 101
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Ancient philosophy, in plain English.

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