It does feel like a moment of societal revolution, with much more capabilities in the hands of more people, but also potentially a changing of social status and a "globalisation" of thought.
Maths used to be about abacuses and times tables. Those skills are lost or reducing because they are irrelevant to solving problems today.
If I can tell my stories in 2035 using Sora V10.5, in a way that looks like a Hollywood blockbuster, then success will be about the story and not the budget required to create it - that feels like an avenue to great creative expression.
Even if AI in the future was itself creative, I'm not sure that's even a problem, creativity isn't a hierarchy - things touch people or they don't. If every technical challenge is solved by AI; if every physical job is done by a robot; humanity can still have purpose and that purpose won't be about buying enough food to eat, or paying the rent. Now that has extreme societal change written all over it.