It's not Vim vs VSCode though - the analogy might be writing in assembler vs writing in your high level language of choice.
Using AI you're increasing the level of abstraction you can work at, and reducing the amount of detail you have to worry about. You tell the AI what you want to do, not how to do it, other than providing context that does tell it about the things that you actually care about (as much or little as you choose, but generally the more the better to achieve a specific outcome).
> the analogy might be writing in assembler vs writing in your high level language of choice.
If it were deterministic, yes, but it's not. When I write in a high level language, I never have to check the compiled code, so this comparison makes no sense.
If we see new kinds of languages, or compile targets, that would be different.