CONCEPT
The Twelve-Year-Old's Question
The scene at the center of the book — a child at the threshold of <em>formal operations</em> asking 'What am I for?' with a cognitive tool powerful enough to pose the question but not yet equipped to manage it.
A twelve-year-old lies in bed in the particular vulnerability of a darkened room and asks her mother: 'What am I for?' Not what she wants to be when she grows up, but the existential version — the question a child asks when she has watched a machine compose music she cannot compose, write stories she cannot write, solve problems she cannot solve, and now wonders what remains. Segal presents the scene in You On AI as a philosophical crisis. The Piagetian reframing reveals it as something more precise: a developmental event that could only occur at this specific moment in a growing mind's architecture, one whose resolution depends on structures the child is only just beginning to build.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The question requires formal operational capacity at the moment of its emergence — the ability to abstract from specific capabilities to the general question of purpose. A nine-year-old, firmly in concrete operations,
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