Most AI tools answer your question with a single voice. You get one perspective — put simply, you get an answer. Wisdom assembles a council of distinct, well-grounded perspectives chosen for your specific decision. You hear their different perspectives. You hear where they converge and where they split. Wisdom lets you interact with them, both together as a council or individually with each, exploring your decision until you decide you're ready to make your decision. The magic of Wisdom is it helps you reach your own answer, in your own way and at your own pace.
Wisdom is a personal-decision tool, not an oracle or a Magic Eight-Ball. You bring a hard decision; it convenes a council of distinct, well-grounded perspectives — philosophies, traditions, lived and literary voices, an evidence voice where facts bear on the choice — and helps you think them through together. What you get back is the real spread of views you'd want in the room, not one consolidated answer.
You describe the decision you need to make in plain language. If you want, you can name a specific perspective you'd like included up front — a tradition that matters to you, or a thinker you value. Wisdom then assembles a council of seven voices selected for that specific decision; you can edit the mix afterwards (remove members, add others from a curated library, or type in any thinker or tradition not listed — Wisdom checks it's a real, recognized perspective before seating it). The council deliberates and surfaces both where it agrees and where it disagrees. Then comes the part that earns Wisdom its name: the council asks you the questions that emerge from its own deliberations — especially its disagreements — questions designed to get at the heart of what only you can know about your situation. You answer, the council re-deliberates in light of what you've shared, and the back-and-forth continues until you're ready. You can keep talking with the whole council, or pull any single voice aside for a one-on-one.
A four-part report from your council: where it converged, where it split (each disagreement traced to the underlying question or value driving it), the questions that only your answers can resolve — drawn from the cruxes of your council's disagreement and designed to illuminate, not steer — and each voice in full with its position and reasoning. You can ask any voice directly, learn more about its tradition, and request a recommendation at any point.
Wisdom helps you decide — it will not decide for you. It does not diagnose, criticize, or push a verdict. You can ask for a recommendation from your council or from any individual voice on your council — but the dissents and concerns stay visible, so the choice stays yours.
Wisdom helps you think through a hard decision yourself. It gathers a council of distinct, well-grounded perspectives — thinkers, traditions, and disciplines — shows you where they agree and disagree, asks you the questions that matter, and talks it through with you, so you're best equipped to make your most important decisions.
Ask any question where your values, not just the facts, decide the answer. And the real value is in the back-and-forth, so treat it as a conversation, and keep going until you're ready.
A few examples:
You can name a specific perspective — such as your religious faith or other beliefs — and Wisdom will weave it into the council it assembles, so what matters to you is considered. This is optional, so enter something if you think it's important.