OK-- how about this real world example:
For 20 years, every doctor I saw made assumptions about my health, and completely missed a simple diagnosis. I noticed something important in 2019, and mentioned to every doctor I saw since, from primary care, to emergent care, to cardiologists, endocrinologists, urologists. None of them listened. They worked rather hard, in fact, to explain away this one fact.
One endocrinologist in 2025 listened, asked a simple question, and made an accurate diagnosis. Probably saved my life. Certainly it's a massive change in quality of life, and will, with any luck, drastically lengthen my life expectancy.
Four major chatbots, from Claude to Grok to ChatGPT and Gemini, when confronted with the single fact I noticed in 2019, instantly provided a correct diagnosis. They weren't ambivalent, they weren't offering it as one of many options, it was a single, clear, accurate and specific diagnosis.
The result of this complete inability to see beyond basic pattern matching is that I had to have major surgery last fall, will probably have to have at least one more major surgery in my lifetime, and it quite literally, nearly killed me.
Doctors are too specialized, too unable to see beyond their preconceived notions. They see an overweight patient walk in (yes, I'm overweight), they automatically start making assumptions, and stop looking for other explanations. And god help you if you're old.