URB #460 argued that free will is philosophically defensible — that the existence of genuine absurdity in the universe proves that some events are not fully determined by prior causes, and that the i-channel is the locus of ontological freedom. This paper argues something stronger, simpler, and more urgent: **the belief in free will is pragmatically and morally non-optional**. Not "probably correct." Not "well-supported by argument." Non-optional. This claim does not rest on philosophical argument. It rests on a direct observation about what happens when a person faces violent, suicidal, or otherwise destructive urges: **if they believe they have no choice, they have no choice**. The deterministic framework, in this context, is not merely false — it is lethal, enabling, and morally self-defeating. The person who asserts free will in the face of such urges is doing the only thing that can save them and protect others: they are claiming the one belief that makes resistance possible. Brandon Emerick accepted free will not because of philosophical argument but because he had to — to survive and to be moral. This is not a weakness in the argument. It is the argument's greatest strength: a philosophical position that, when tested against the hardest case of lived human experience, proves to be the only livable option. William James called this the "will to believe." The GILE framework calls it the Goodness dimension in its most urgent form: the assertion of moral agency as a survival act. The determinist who faces violent urges and tells themselves "I have no choice" is not being intellectually rigorous. They are being reckless with their own life and others'.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.