Religion and Philosophy
The first principle of existentialism , according to Jean-Paul Sartre 's Lecture Existentialism is a Humanism ' given in 1946 , is defined by man 's continued creation of his essence by the choices he makes . In Sartre 's words , it is that Man is nothing else but that which he makes of himself (349 . The idea 's that give rise to and stem from this is that man 's arrival into the universe marked his existence , but the essence of who he would become , his definition , is dependent upon nothing outside of himself but upon

him . It identifies man as the agent of his own formation , the subject of his situation , the doer of all actions from which spring all consequences . This idea of man negates human nature as , according to Sartre , no God exists to conceive it Therefore , man must create his nature ' by his own effort
In saying that existence comes before essence , Sartre argues that man is something which propels itself towards a future (349 , yet with no influences external to that of his own will that prompt him to make choices . All is dependent upon him . In the New Testament , Paul relates that he often does things that he does not want to do , and he recognizes this a sin 's being at work in his life . The first principle of existentialism attributes this to man 's making the best choice , for he is unable ever to choose the worse (350 . However , there is something unsettling in the idea of one 's creating oneself by one 's choices People often find it difficult to engage in certain activities that he or she would like to be a part of . A shy person may not like being shy and though he or she may take great pains to get over it , shyness persists though it may be obscured . A biologist might consider personality traits to be genetic . It would be interesting to note the geneticist 's reaction to this tenet of existentialism
The first meaning of the term subjectivism as given by Sartre is the freedom of the individual subject (350 . It is the point at which man is single in himself and identifies himself as different from others . He is alone , solitary ' detached and free from the conception of others His freedom might be seen at work in the subjects ' being at liberty to make the choices that soon define him
The other meaning is that it is not possible for man to go beyond his own subjectivity . Sartre identifies this second subjectivism as the deeper meaning of existentialism (350 . It postulates man as unobjectifiable that is , he is unable to become an object in his own situation because he is his own scrutinizer . Therefore , not only is it impossible to see man as a whole , but it is also impossible to inquire what lies `behind ' appearance (Copleston , 186 . But man can surpass himself in that by making choices he continually becomes more than what he was before...
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