I respect Edsger Dijkstra as much as the next developer, but I'm not convinced that his name should be a special case for autocorrection. Two arguments come to my mind here. The more obvious one (I think) is "we don't do it for anything else." The better one is "we already allow and encourage community editing."
If we implement this as an automated thing, then what else should we correct automatically? All those decisions take time and effort to make that distract from Q&A and Documentation (let's face it, if you're coming here just for meta, you're kinda doing it wrong... not that that's ever described me...). And once decided upon, there's development, performance and maintenance cost to those features.
Seems better to just use the community editing practices we already have in place to slowly tackle these. It is incredibly rare for a post to have exactly one error or place that could be improved with editing. Generally speaking, editors should be correcting everything they are capable of fixing when they submit edits, not just fixing one problem and leaving others. Humans would be able to make multiple improvements along with fixing misspellings of "Dijkstra"; machine autocorrection would not. (Really, the lack of a strong editing culture on the site is more of a root problem here, and what you're pointing out is merely a symptom, but that's a way bigger issue than what your question was trying to address.)
I might be slightly more receptive to this if the misspelling were actively interfering with communication, but I don't think people are getting confused about the intended meaning of the misspelled word "Djikstra" (or any other variants).