I have enjoyed driving vehicles with ceramic brakes immensely.
I haven't driven a Lucid on a windy road yet - but on very windy roads, even the Lucid's decent Akebono-brand brake set up will possibly see some minor fade in performance, especially if there's a large downhill section where you're constantly hitting the brakes and have to go at a high speed. Of course, most civil engineers don't design roads to be this aggressive - so this would be an unusual circumstance. Or more likely, you're probably just driving faster than the prescribed speed limit.
The benefits of ceramic brakes on a Lucid is two fold - yes it has superior braking performance but it also the massive reduction in unsprung weight and rotational masses. The carbon ceramic disc is likely less than half the weight of the conventional iron metal disc. This reduction in rotational masses really helps the car speed up and slow down. Imagine speeding up a round soccer ball made of rock - it takes some effort - now imagine slowing it down while it's rolling down a hill! Now imagine if that rock weighed only half the weight - it'd be a lot better to speed it up and to slow it down.
So I'd like to see a Lucid with carbon fiber wheels (or something else that's lighter in weight) and with ceramic brakes! That would save probably 15 pounds or 7 kilograms on each corner - probably over 60 pounds or 28 kilograms of rotational masses! That'd make a VERY NOTICEABLE improvement in the car's willingness to change direction as the reduction of rotational inertia is definitely able to be felt. Even something as little as 2 pounds shaved per corner is extremely noticeable - I had a BMW 5 series that used to come with run flats - when I switched to non runlets saving 2-3 pounds on each tire, the difference in the car's behavior was noticeable. Good thing that the BMW had a spare tire. Too bad, the Lucid does not have a spare tire!
One last note, don't drive cars with ceramic brakes on dirt roads or roads with little rocks, there is a chance that these rocks or pebbles can damage the disc. So the ceramic discs can be more fragile in a certain sense.