Marketdash

The "Super Subconscious": How AI Is Reshaping Creative Work and Human Potential

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Javier Ideami, a leading voice on AI and creativity, explains why artificial intelligence is like putting on an Iron Man suit for your brain—and what it means for creative professionals navigating the next decade of unprecedented technological transformation.

Think about everything you've experienced in your lifetime. Every conversation, every book, every moment that shaped your creative instincts. Now imagine having access to essentially all of human knowledge and creative output at once, processed at machine speed. That's the "super subconscious" Javier Ideami is talking about, and it's already here.

Ideami has positioned himself at the center of the conversation around AI, creativity, and what happens when these forces collide. He's not just theorizing from the sidelines—he's experimenting with the technology while asking the bigger questions about how it reshapes art, culture, and the entire creative economy. His work translates the sometimes overwhelming world of AI innovation into something that makes sense for people actually doing creative work.

In a recent interview with SpeakOut Speakers Agency, Ideami laid out his vision for where this is all heading. And it's worth paying attention to, because the changes he's describing aren't abstract future possibilities. They're already unfolding.

The Iron Man Suit for Your Brain

"AI is a powerful tool in the creation process because it taps into what can be interpreted as a super subconscious," Ideami explains. "When we think about our lives, we have a limited time to absorb experiences, to get to know people and places and content, but AI, of course, is being trained on most or all of the internet. So, we can sort of compare it to a massive, almost infinite subconscious. AI is offering us an almost infinite reservoir of ideas and possibilities. It operates with incredible speed."

The analogy he keeps returning to is Iron Man's suit. You're still you, but suddenly your capabilities expand exponentially. The AI doesn't replace your judgment or creativity—it amplifies what you can do with the time and energy you have.

"AI operates with efficiency and it doesn't get tired like us," Ideami notes. "It tirelessly generates possibilities, ideas, content, and solutions to accelerate the creative process far beyond what we can achieve on our own, because our time and capacity to absorb experiences is limited."

Here's where it gets interesting. Ideami describes what he calls the "era of the super subconscious"—a moment when AI has mastered fast, intuitive, pattern-matching thinking (what psychologists call system one thinking) but hasn't yet cracked methodical, deep analytical reasoning (system two thinking). That creates what he sees as a beautiful partnership: AI handles the rapid-fire ideation and pattern recognition while humans bring judgment, strategic thinking, and deeper reasoning to the table.

"That's why I call this new era that we are beginning the era of the super subconscious, when AI has mastered that pattern matching, fast thinking, system one thinking, but it has not yet mastered system two thinking, the slow thinking, the methodical, analytical, deep reasoning type of thinking," he says. "So, it's a beautiful blend between the AI and us."

The personalization angle is another game-changer. Most creators simply don't have time to customize their work for dozens of different audiences. AI can do that at scale, tailoring content to specific groups in ways that would take humans weeks or months to accomplish manually.

What the Next Decade Looks Like

When you ask Ideami about the next five to ten years, he doesn't hold back. "Creative industries are going to undergo very big changes. The way we interact with them today, and the way people will interact with them within the next five or ten years, is going to be a whole different ball game."

The automation piece is probably the most obvious shift. Routine creative work—editing, formatting, basic production tasks—will increasingly get handled by AI systems. That's not about replacing creatives; it's about freeing them up to focus on the parts of their work they actually enjoy and where they add the most value.

"Increased automation is a very positive development," Ideami argues. "It will allow creatives and the industry in general to handle routine, repetitive creative tasks, like editing and formatting, through AI. This frees up more time for actual innovation, which is what people enjoy the most, and for higher-level, executive, supervisory work."

But the really wild part is what he calls creative longevity through digital twins. Imagine a version of your creative sensibility that can keep producing, evolving, and working even when you're not actively creating. You become the director and supervisor while your AI twin handles execution. It's simultaneously fascinating and a little unsettling.

"Creative professionals have limited energy and time, but AI can allow their output to continue evolving over time," Ideami explains. "It allows them to rest, direct, and supervise their output by partnering with AI twins."

The skills landscape will shift dramatically too. Many technical skills that took years to master will become automated, pushing demand toward higher-level thinking: strategic judgment, ethical reasoning, and supervisory capabilities. New roles will emerge—some we can't even conceptualize yet with our current frameworks.

The Ethics Question

Ideami doesn't shy away from the thorny issues. Copyright, bias, transparency, responsible use—these questions aren't peripheral concerns. They're central to how this technology gets deployed and who benefits from it.

"This leads to the ethics of generative AI, which is a whole different discussion," he notes. "I often speak at conferences about the ethical ramifications of this technology, including legal issues, copyright, bias, transparency, and responsible use."

Companies are already racing to integrate AI into their existing creative pipelines. Over the next few years, that integration work—figuring out what works, what doesn't, and how to do it responsibly—will occupy enormous amounts of attention and resources.

The personalization capabilities will also transform how companies interact with consumers. We're talking about content tailored at a level of specificity that simply wasn't economically feasible before. That creates more engaging experiences, but it also raises questions about manipulation, privacy, and what happens when every piece of content you encounter has been algorithmically optimized for your particular psychology.

"Market and creative output personalization will be a massive change," Ideami says. "Companies will deliver finely tailored, personalized content, creating far more engaging consumer experiences."

The bottom line, according to Ideami, is that creative industries are about to experience some of the most dramatic transformation of any sector. "That's why it's going to be one of the sectors that changes the most in the next few years."

Whether you're excited or anxious about that future probably depends on where you sit in the creative economy. But either way, understanding what's coming—and what it means for human creativity, judgment, and work—matters a lot right now.

This interview with Javier Ideami was conducted by Tabish Ali of the Champions Speakers Agency.

The "Super Subconscious": How AI Is Reshaping Creative Work and Human Potential

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Javier Ideami, a leading voice on AI and creativity, explains why artificial intelligence is like putting on an Iron Man suit for your brain—and what it means for creative professionals navigating the next decade of unprecedented technological transformation.

Think about everything you've experienced in your lifetime. Every conversation, every book, every moment that shaped your creative instincts. Now imagine having access to essentially all of human knowledge and creative output at once, processed at machine speed. That's the "super subconscious" Javier Ideami is talking about, and it's already here.

Ideami has positioned himself at the center of the conversation around AI, creativity, and what happens when these forces collide. He's not just theorizing from the sidelines—he's experimenting with the technology while asking the bigger questions about how it reshapes art, culture, and the entire creative economy. His work translates the sometimes overwhelming world of AI innovation into something that makes sense for people actually doing creative work.

In a recent interview with SpeakOut Speakers Agency, Ideami laid out his vision for where this is all heading. And it's worth paying attention to, because the changes he's describing aren't abstract future possibilities. They're already unfolding.

The Iron Man Suit for Your Brain

"AI is a powerful tool in the creation process because it taps into what can be interpreted as a super subconscious," Ideami explains. "When we think about our lives, we have a limited time to absorb experiences, to get to know people and places and content, but AI, of course, is being trained on most or all of the internet. So, we can sort of compare it to a massive, almost infinite subconscious. AI is offering us an almost infinite reservoir of ideas and possibilities. It operates with incredible speed."

The analogy he keeps returning to is Iron Man's suit. You're still you, but suddenly your capabilities expand exponentially. The AI doesn't replace your judgment or creativity—it amplifies what you can do with the time and energy you have.

"AI operates with efficiency and it doesn't get tired like us," Ideami notes. "It tirelessly generates possibilities, ideas, content, and solutions to accelerate the creative process far beyond what we can achieve on our own, because our time and capacity to absorb experiences is limited."

Here's where it gets interesting. Ideami describes what he calls the "era of the super subconscious"—a moment when AI has mastered fast, intuitive, pattern-matching thinking (what psychologists call system one thinking) but hasn't yet cracked methodical, deep analytical reasoning (system two thinking). That creates what he sees as a beautiful partnership: AI handles the rapid-fire ideation and pattern recognition while humans bring judgment, strategic thinking, and deeper reasoning to the table.

"That's why I call this new era that we are beginning the era of the super subconscious, when AI has mastered that pattern matching, fast thinking, system one thinking, but it has not yet mastered system two thinking, the slow thinking, the methodical, analytical, deep reasoning type of thinking," he says. "So, it's a beautiful blend between the AI and us."

The personalization angle is another game-changer. Most creators simply don't have time to customize their work for dozens of different audiences. AI can do that at scale, tailoring content to specific groups in ways that would take humans weeks or months to accomplish manually.

What the Next Decade Looks Like

When you ask Ideami about the next five to ten years, he doesn't hold back. "Creative industries are going to undergo very big changes. The way we interact with them today, and the way people will interact with them within the next five or ten years, is going to be a whole different ball game."

The automation piece is probably the most obvious shift. Routine creative work—editing, formatting, basic production tasks—will increasingly get handled by AI systems. That's not about replacing creatives; it's about freeing them up to focus on the parts of their work they actually enjoy and where they add the most value.

"Increased automation is a very positive development," Ideami argues. "It will allow creatives and the industry in general to handle routine, repetitive creative tasks, like editing and formatting, through AI. This frees up more time for actual innovation, which is what people enjoy the most, and for higher-level, executive, supervisory work."

But the really wild part is what he calls creative longevity through digital twins. Imagine a version of your creative sensibility that can keep producing, evolving, and working even when you're not actively creating. You become the director and supervisor while your AI twin handles execution. It's simultaneously fascinating and a little unsettling.

"Creative professionals have limited energy and time, but AI can allow their output to continue evolving over time," Ideami explains. "It allows them to rest, direct, and supervise their output by partnering with AI twins."

The skills landscape will shift dramatically too. Many technical skills that took years to master will become automated, pushing demand toward higher-level thinking: strategic judgment, ethical reasoning, and supervisory capabilities. New roles will emerge—some we can't even conceptualize yet with our current frameworks.

The Ethics Question

Ideami doesn't shy away from the thorny issues. Copyright, bias, transparency, responsible use—these questions aren't peripheral concerns. They're central to how this technology gets deployed and who benefits from it.

"This leads to the ethics of generative AI, which is a whole different discussion," he notes. "I often speak at conferences about the ethical ramifications of this technology, including legal issues, copyright, bias, transparency, and responsible use."

Companies are already racing to integrate AI into their existing creative pipelines. Over the next few years, that integration work—figuring out what works, what doesn't, and how to do it responsibly—will occupy enormous amounts of attention and resources.

The personalization capabilities will also transform how companies interact with consumers. We're talking about content tailored at a level of specificity that simply wasn't economically feasible before. That creates more engaging experiences, but it also raises questions about manipulation, privacy, and what happens when every piece of content you encounter has been algorithmically optimized for your particular psychology.

"Market and creative output personalization will be a massive change," Ideami says. "Companies will deliver finely tailored, personalized content, creating far more engaging consumer experiences."

The bottom line, according to Ideami, is that creative industries are about to experience some of the most dramatic transformation of any sector. "That's why it's going to be one of the sectors that changes the most in the next few years."

Whether you're excited or anxious about that future probably depends on where you sit in the creative economy. But either way, understanding what's coming—and what it means for human creativity, judgment, and work—matters a lot right now.

This interview with Javier Ideami was conducted by Tabish Ali of the Champions Speakers Agency.