Sartre states that “What happens to me happens through me, and I can neither affect myself with it nor revolt against it nor resign myself to it. Moreover everything which happens to me is mine” (447). I believe he means that when any event happens to me it becomes a part of me. Furthermore, each event that happens to and through me becomes my responsibility entirely. Also, he explains that every situation is human in some way. “Only through fear, flight and recourse…shall [I] decide on the non-human, but this decision is human” (Sartre 448). The decision, situation, and everything connected to it all belong to me because the decision was my free choice and it “represents me and symbolizes me” (Sartre 448).
Sartre takes the idea of war to a new level. If a person is at all involved in a war, it becomes their war. There is always a way to get out of it, but anyone who chooses not to deserves any consequences of the war, according to Sartre. “I could always get out of it by suicide or by desertion” (Sartre 448). The choice may be based on fear of the public repercussions, out of a need to uphold personal values, or to defend one’s honor. Regardless, because I chose to stay I remain responsible for my choice and the war that I am a part of. Each time I choose to perform something related to war I am continuing to take responsibility for the war. “Therefore we must agree with the statement by J. Romains, ‘In war there are no innocent victims’” (Sartre 448). Though I may not have declared the war, this does not exempt me from responsibility for it. This attempt at exemption only holds up in a legal sense.
The war is also mine because “it arises in a situation which I cause to be and that I can discover it there only by engaging myself for or against it” (Sartre 448). Any of my choices about myself in the war are no different from my choices about the war itself. However, it is also pointless to consider what my life would be like if the war never took place. I made decisions that led me to partake in the war. Without the war, there would be a contradiction. The part of my life that came before only makes sense if I am in the war. I chose to be in the war, which makes me as responsible for it as I had declared the war. It is part of me. I cannot “live without integrating it in my situation, engaging myself in it wholly… I must be without remorse or regrets as I am without excuse” (Sartre 449).
Sartre, Jean-Paul. “On ‘Absolute Freedom.’” Introducing Philosophy. Robert C. Solomon. New York: Oxford UP, 2008.
Solomon, Robert C. Introducing Philosophy. New York: Oxford UP, 2008.