There are twenty-five uses here of I, me, or my. The perspective here is of one of self-determination and self-authenticity. I determine my fate, I am the subject and object, and I am the judge of my life. The great need of my existence is not to honor someone or even something beyond me; it is effectively to honor myself. I need to be true to me. There is not very much that I can discover beyond myself; I am the one who maps meaning onto myself or finds it within me. The Christian doctrine of humanity
Pages 12–13