This paper proposes a transition: from skill to judgment. AI systems today are trained for skill — the ability to execute a task correctly. Few are trained for judgment — the ability to stop and ask whether to execute it. Judgment, it is argued here, is the ability to create a seam intentionally — to interrupt the sequence, to ask, to decide. Current Vision-Language-Action architectures published in the literature are trained end-to-end as a single learning process with two inference heads, thereby producing skill but not judgment. The framework proposed here — The Self-Generated Seam — identifies three structural elements: (1) a parallel slow-rate developmental channel grounded in the system's own bodily experience; (2) a learned reflective gate (not rule-based) allowing the system to pause before acting; (3) a developmental memory that transforms over time rather than merely accumulating. The framework does not propose a concrete implementation; it proposes a direction. Systems that begin to operate along this direction will, over time, reach further than systems that advance solely along the current trajectory of intensified skill. The paper continues Failures at the Seams (Speiser 2026a), advancing the claim that the ability to create a seam intentionally is not a bug — it is a precondition for judgment.
Oren Speiser (Tue,) studied this question.
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