Hi Victor,
Welcome from Argentina. I loved eating/travelling there ...wow, the parrilla is king! Missed it all!!

OK, so if you want to do this right, and I mean genuinely correctly and not just hunting and guessing, then you have to measure not just height at 12th fret, but straight edge along the fretboard and measure where it it relative to the saddle, as well as remove the neck and look at the shims you have. THEN, take all this info and call Taylor with your actual numbers. They
will sell you sets of shims (the tech offered such to me) if you can convince them on the phone that you know what you're doing and won't muck up your guitar. And even at that, you will likely still have to refit shims/neck more than once (unless you're just lucky) to get it truly where you want. The measurements you give to Taylor will get them close so they can send you shim sets that are in the ballpark, but you ultimately have to do the trial/error work.
So, are you willing to take all the necessary measurements, wait for the proper shim sets that are properly/precisely graduated, and remove/refit the neck multiple times to get the guitar where it suits you best?
Or are you willing to entrust your "luthier" to use your existing shims, then remake
several sets with the same
beveled accuracy, in gradations to
thousandths of an inch, and to the level of consistency as Taylor, themselves, accomplish with CNC machines? Because, after all, it is the shims, themselves, that comprise the solid connection between the neck and body: any gaps or irregularities here and that connection --ahem, tonal connection-- is compromised. But if your guy is
that good to get to three digits, and consistently so, then he "simply" has to copy your pair and fabricate new sets in the proper increments.
I'm not being flippant, but this is the basic choice you have, as I see you describe it, anyway. Your guitar, your call. If you keep your existing shims, you can always come back to the original, so no harm done. But if you are looking to reset your guitar's neck angle correctly and maintain its excellent sound and playability, then there is a right way, and maybe a less-than-right way. There are many things one can accomplish perfectly well as DIY tasks, then there are other things that require more skill and tooling. Just my thoughts here, sir

Edward