Seventh Man Research Paper

Words: 615
Pages: 3

"A true soldier fights not because he hates what's in front of him, but because he loves what's behind him," Gilbert Keith Chesterton said on January 14, 1911. Soldiers fight for their country and the people in them they care about. Most soldiers don't choose what they do or who they shoot, they're often following orders. On the battlefield, there's no time to think, soldiers follow the orders given and don't contemplate the outcome beforehand. Some people think soldiers should be held responsible for their actions at war, they are simply trying to survive and get home to their families. Soldiers decide to join the military, however, they don't decide what happens on the battlefield. In The Seventh Man, no one blamed him for asking his friend …show more content…
They may have been children, however, they were warned about the dangers before they left and they still went out, as did soldiers. Soldiers decide to join the military, but they don't decide what happens on the battlefield. Like in The Seventh Man, soldiers shouldn't be held accountable for what they do in times of war. Soldiers often feel very guilty when they come back from war. Often at war, soldiers watch other soldiers lose their lives and they stand there because they don't know what else to do. According to The Moral Logic of Survivors Guilt, soldiers often come home with survivor's guilt and contemplate why they didn't die on the field. "The guilt behind an endless loop of counterfactuals-thoughts that you could've or should've done something better or different." The guilt comes from seeing other soldiers die continuously, and still survive. According to The Moral Logic of Survivors Guilt, the survivor's guilt isn't logical. There's no logical reason for them to feel this guilt after what they've gone through. When soldiers come home, they often have a sense of guilt they shouldn't. Some people might say soldiers should be held accountable because they killed people, sometimes even innocent civilians, to