Artificial intelligence is extraordinarily good at pattern recognition (registration required) within defined systems. Structured data, repeatable processes, predictable outputs—machines are going to keep getting better at all of it. But AI cannot do what many people with dyslexia do naturally: connect dots across unrelated domains, question the assumption everyone else walked past, think visually instead of linearly.
Those aren’t soft skills. As machines take over execution, human value shifts toward imagination—and that’s where dyslexic thinkers have often lived.
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