Let $L$ be a semisimple Lie algebra and let $(V,\varphi)$ be a finite-dimensional $L$-module representation. Our main goal is to prove that $\varphi$ is completely reducible. Consider an $L$-submodule of $V$ of codimension one, let $0 \longrightarrow W \longrightarrow V \longrightarrow F \longrightarrow 0$ be an exact sequence (where $F$ is an $L$-module). From the book of James Humphreys called "Introduction to Lie Algebras and Representation Theory", I have understood the following steps:
- We take another proper submodule of $W$ denoted by $W'$ such that the exact sequence $0 \longrightarrow W/W' \longrightarrow V/W' \longrightarrow F \longrightarrow 0$ splits, so there exists a one dimensional $L$-submodule of $V/W'$ (say $\tilde{W}/W'$) complementary to $W/W'$.
- We proceed by induction on the dimension of $W$, so we get an exact sequence $0 \longrightarrow W' \longrightarrow \tilde{W} \longrightarrow F \longrightarrow 0$ which splits. It follows easily that $V=W \oplus X$, where $X$ is a submodule complementary to $W'$ in $\tilde{W}$.
- We suppose that $W$ is irreducible, so we may use Schur's lemma on $c \vert_{W}$ to say that $\operatorname{Ker} c$ is an $L$-submodule of $V$, where $c$ is the endomorphism of $V$ defined in 6.2.
The other parts of the proof are very hard, and I didn't understand them. Can someone help me to figure out those parts? If there is another comprehensible method, can someone share it with us?