The objection is immediate: a large language model can produce the sentence "What am I for?" in any language, any register. The linguistic act is trivial. The Korczakian framework reveals why this misses the point entirely. The question is not a linguistic act but an existential condition. Beneath the words lies a specific structure of experience the twelve-year-old possesses and the machine does not: mortality, finitude, the awareness that time is limited and choices matter, the capacity to care about what happens between now and the ending. The question presupposes these conditions. Its askability is evidence — not of intelligence, but of the specific kind of being that is alive, finite, and capable of experiencing the weight of its own existence.
The question presupposes three things the machine does not possess. Self-awareness — not the computational ability to model one's