Lester Frank Ward used the phrase "all-sided wisdom" to describe JS Mill in his 1893 book "The Psychic Factors of Civilization". It's a wonderful phrase, and could perhaps be used to describe [[Digital Garden/Metamodernism]]. All-sided wisdom would also serve as a useful definition of philosophy. Philosophy at its best seeks to look at life from the broadest perspective possible. As Raymond de Geuss points out in his book Changing the Subject, philosophy has available to it the unique move of being able to change the very terms of the game in which questions are being asked. Robert Nozick's A Life Examined captures this all-sided aspect of wisdom in crystalline form.