Had Melquíades, the wandering merchant from Gabriel García
Márquez's mythical town of Macondo, arrived today, he might have abandoned
magnets and alchemy altogether. Instead, he would likely travel from village to
village promoting flexibility, adaptability, lifelong learning, and prompt
engineering. Hanging from the side of his cart would be the Swiss Army knife of
educational advice, ready to be unfolded whenever uncertainty appeared.
The villagers would remain astonished, though perhaps no
better informed about the future.
This is not because flexibility is useless. It is not.
Adaptability is a real virtue. Lifelong learning matters. Education should
absolutely help people develop judgment, range, curiosity, and the ability to
keep moving when the ground changes under them.
But every era has its miracle cure. We have had snake oil,
patent medicines, management fads, motivational posters, and now an unusually
cheerful faith in adaptability. Whatever the problem, the answer arrives
wearing sensible shoes: be more flexible, learn continuously, reinvent
yourself, develop a growth mindset, and perhaps take a short course on
prompting. Somewhere, one suspects, there is a conference panel titled
“Thriving in Uncertainty” being delivered with absolute certainty.
The joke is not on adaptability. The joke is on our tendency
to treat it as a universal solvent.
The Limits of Personal Adaptation
Much of our educational and professional advice assumes that
the structure itself will remain fundamentally recognizable. A recession?
Adapt. A new technology? Adapt. A volatile labor market? Adapt. The advice is
not wrong. People do need tools for change.
The question is whether tools are enough.
Flexibility has become the Swiss Army knife of educational
advice. Whatever the challenge, someone eventually unfolds the adaptability
attachment. It is a useful tool, and perhaps an essential one. The concern is
that we may be mistaking a toolbox for a blueprint.
A toolbox can help you repair a door, tighten a loose screw,
or patch a leak. It does not tell you what kind of house you are building. It
does not answer whether the foundation is stable. It does not decide who gets
to live inside.
That distinction matters because the current moment may not
be asking only for individual adaptation. It may be asking for institutional
redesign.
Painting During an Earthquake
I sometimes wonder whether our conversation about the future
resembles a group of people discussing painting techniques while the building
is experiencing a mild but unmistakable earthquake.
The discussion is not wrong. Painting matters. Technique
matters. Maintenance matters. But at some point, the urgency of the moment lies
elsewhere. The question is no longer what color to paint the walls. It is
whether the foundations require redesign.
Cosmetic upgrades are useful when the structure is sound.
The possibility we seem reluctant to discuss is that the structure itself may
require reconstruction.
This is where many conversations about education begin to
feel simultaneously correct and insufficient. Schools and universities are told
to prepare students for jobs that may not exist yet, industries that may
transform beyond recognition, and tools that may change faster than curriculum
committees can meet. Under the circumstances, teaching adaptability is not
irrational. It is probably necessary.
But it is still a bet. It is not a strategy.
I do not blame educators for this. They are facing a problem
for which nobody has a fully satisfying answer. The issue is not incompetence.
The issue is genuine uncertainty. When uncertainty becomes too large to map,
institutions naturally retreat toward durable virtues: critical thinking,
communication, adaptability, collaboration, continuous learning. These are good
things. They are also incomplete things.
They describe how a person should respond to change. They do
not describe what kind of society we are trying to build through change.
The Wrong Question
Part of the confusion comes from the way we talk about
artificial intelligence. Questions about intelligence, creativity,
consciousness, understanding, and human likeness are not trivial; they are
among the most fascinating questions the technology raises. But they are not
the only questions in front of us. And they may not be the questions whose
consequences arrive first.
The labor market is not asking whether AI has a soul. It is
asking whether AI can do useful cognitive work.
We do not ask whether the tractor is “really” a horse. We
ask whether it can pull the plow. We do not ask whether the calculator
understands arithmetic. We ask whether it can perform arithmetic reliably
enough to change the work around it. Economic consequences often arrive before
philosophical consensus has finished putting on its coat.
That is what makes this moment different from ordinary
technological disruption. We are not only automating muscle. We are beginning
to automate parts of cognition: writing, coding, translation, analysis, design,
research, synthesis, and coordination. Not all of it. Not perfectly. Not
without human judgment. But enough to matter.
For centuries, many forms of human economic value were
protected because cognitive labor was expensive to reproduce. Knowledge,
language, analysis, and judgment took time to cultivate and were difficult to
scale. Now we are watching some forms of cognitive work become cheaper, faster,
and more reproducible. The shock does not come mainly from metaphysics. It
comes from economics.
The Labor Problem Is Not the Knowledge Problem
This is why the conversation often becomes so polarized. On
one side are people who look at AI and see an extraordinary tool for
exploration, creativity, and collective learning. On the other side are people
who see job loss, surveillance, power concentration, and institutional
instability. Both reactions make sense because they are often responding to
different problems.
If we perform a thought experiment and temporarily remove
concerns about livelihoods, surveillance, and concentrated power, AI becomes
much less frightening. In that world, many people would look at it and say:
this is astonishing, useful, intellectually fascinating, and maybe even fun.
The trouble is that livelihoods are not a side issue. They
are the mechanism through which most people secure autonomy, dignity, status,
and participation in society. You cannot simply bracket them out and call the
remaining picture progress.
This distinction matters. The labor problem is
institutional, economic, and political. The knowledge problem is intellectual,
scientific, and creative. They are connected, but they are not the same
problem. Confusing them leads to bad arguments in both directions.
If the concern is income, then we should talk about income.
If the concern is education, then we should talk about education. If the
concern is surveillance, then we should talk about governance. If the concern
is power concentration, then we should talk about institutions. But pretending
all of this can be solved by telling individuals to reinvent themselves is a
category error wearing a productivity badge.
Career Advice Is Not a Social Contract
The deeper problem is that modern societies have tied
contribution, dignity, identity, purpose, and value very tightly to economic
participation. Work is not merely how most people earn money. It is also how
they are recognized, organized, measured, and often judged.
So if AI changes the role of human labor, the question is
not only “What jobs will exist?” It is also: What happens to dignity? What
happens to participation? What happens to status? What happens to education
when information transfer becomes less central? What happens to identity when
the old story of contribution no longer holds in the same way?
These are not problems that can be solved with a better
personal brand. They are not solved by another webinar on resilience. They are
not solved by telling everyone to become more adaptable, though adaptability
may help people survive the transition.
At some point, we have to admit that career advice is not a
social contract.
This is where the language of reconstruction becomes useful.
The question may not be how to preserve every old category of human value
against machines. The question may be what new forms of value, contribution,
and collective learning we can build now that different capabilities are
available.
From Defense to Construction
Much of the discussion around AI still has a defensive
posture. It asks: What remains uniquely ours? Nuance? Consciousness?
Creativity? Feelings? Meaning? These questions are understandable. They are
also exhausting, because every new capability forces the boundary line to move
again.
What if human value is not a fossil to be discovered but a
project to be built?
That question changes the tone. It shifts us from defending
a shrinking territory to designing a larger one. It suggests that the most
important work ahead may not be proving that humans possess some untouchable
essence, but building institutions that allow human beings to flourish in a
world where intelligence, knowledge, and creativity are organized differently.
If knowledge becomes cheaper, education may need to move
away from information transfer as its central identity. It may need to focus
more deliberately on judgment, synthesis, framing, questioning, coordination,
ethics, taste, and participation in larger systems of learning. Not because
these things are magically immune to automation, but because they become more
important when raw information is abundant.
This is the part that should be exciting. If the economic
and political problems could be handled with seriousness instead of slogans,
this might be one of the most intellectually alive moments in history. Never
before have so many people had access to systems capable of helping them
explore, combine, test, and express ideas at this scale. The possibility of
collective learning is enormous.
But that possibility requires design. It requires
institutions. It requires choices about power, incentives, access, labor,
education, and dignity. In other words, it requires more than flexibility.
A Toolbox Is Not a Blueprint
Adaptability tells people how to respond to change. It does
not tell society what future it is building toward.
That is the missing piece in so much of our current advice.
We keep offering tools because nobody can confidently describe the building. So
we hand people flexibility, lifelong learning, growth mindset, prompt
engineering, and a small screwdriver attachment for emergencies. The tools are
real. Some are valuable. But tools do not substitute for architecture.
The challenge may be larger than individual adaptation. If
so, the honest response is not despair. It is construction.
Once we recognize that the problem is structural, we can
stop blaming individuals for not running fast enough inside systems that are
themselves being redesigned in real time. We can stop treating social questions
as personal deficiencies. We can stop mistaking renovation for reconstruction.
The old map may be wrong. The old building may need work.
The canvas may be blank in places we expected to find instructions.
That is unsettling. It is also strangely hopeful. A blank
canvas is not the same as a dead end. It simply means we do not yet know what
should be painted on it.
And perhaps that is the real task now: not merely to adapt
to the future, but to participate in building one worth adapting to.

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