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"Prosperity after Success" in Tao Te Ching
The second chapter of the Tao Te Ching says:

Let all things grow according to their own laws, let all things develop freely without interference, cultivate all things without possession, cultivate all things without relying on and showing off their own strength, and achieve all things without asking for merit.

It is precisely because he doesn't take credit that he will have nothing to lose in his career.

I think this statement can be explained by dialectics.

First of all, talk about its right side:

My major is primary education, so I'd better contact my major. I think this sentence is very appropriate to describe the education of parents or teachers to their children. There are two reasons:

First, we study psychology. Constructivism holds that students are the main body of students, and teachers (or parents) are only guides to guide students to actively combine external knowledge with their own cognitive structure. In the process of children's growth, TA itself accounts for a large part. Therefore, we must not attribute the growth of children to ourselves, thinking that we are the most important, and children are just our "manufactured goods".

Second, education is an activity between people, and its subject is people. The best effect of education is to "moisten things silently". If we reward ourselves every day, then on the one hand, we will lose the meaning of education, and education for the sake of education is bound to be utilitarian; On the other hand, teachers or parents think that they are complacent when cultivating students, so the children as the main body can't find their own value, and they can't give play to their enthusiasm and promote their better growth.

From another angle, I don't think this sentence is appropriate either.

We see the pressure and competition in modern society, so sometimes we can't do without taking credit. Imagine that the boss asked you to do something with the team, and you made a major contribution, but the reward was fairly distributed. Will we feel "fair" in the long run? What's more, what if someone else comes to live without taking credit?

So, I don't think I can completely do what I call "taking no credit". We just said, don't "take credit" for others, and don't care too much about your own.

Just be positive and modest.