ClerHopkins
New member
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2026
- Messages
- 3
Let us pause for a moment and consider the nature of gratitude. What does it mean, truly, to feel seen by a stranger? To have someone enter your academic life, briefly, and leave it better than they found it? 
I asked these questions today, staring at the grade on my screen: 96%.
The Context:
I am a philosophy major. This is relevant because I was, inexplicably, required to take International Economics as an elective. The professor is lovely. The subject matter? A foreign language spoken in a country I've never visited.

The paper: 8 pages on "The Impact of Tariffs on Developing Nations." I knew my argument (tariffs = bad for poor countries, generally), but I did not know the data. I did not know the models. I was, to put it philosophically, lost in the noumenon.
The Writer:
"EcoNomist" (the capitalization is theirs, a small flourish I appreciate) responded to my forum request within hours. We exchanged messages. They asked questions—specific ones, about which countries I wanted to focus on, which time period, which theoretical framework.
I felt, for the first time in this class, that someone understood what the professor wanted.
The Paper:
Is it ethical to hire someone to help with a paper outside your major? I've wrestled with this. Plato would probably disapprove. But Aristotle might say we're fulfilling our nature by seeking help when needed.
I've decided: it's okay to ask for help. Especially when the alternative is failing and never taking another philosophy class again.
Verdict: EcoNomist is a 10/10. If you're a humanities person trapped in a social science nightmare, this is your guide.
I asked these questions today, staring at the grade on my screen: 96%.
The Context:
I am a philosophy major. This is relevant because I was, inexplicably, required to take International Economics as an elective. The professor is lovely. The subject matter? A foreign language spoken in a country I've never visited.
The paper: 8 pages on "The Impact of Tariffs on Developing Nations." I knew my argument (tariffs = bad for poor countries, generally), but I did not know the data. I did not know the models. I was, to put it philosophically, lost in the noumenon.
The Writer:
"EcoNomist" (the capitalization is theirs, a small flourish I appreciate) responded to my forum request within hours. We exchanged messages. They asked questions—specific ones, about which countries I wanted to focus on, which time period, which theoretical framework.
I felt, for the first time in this class, that someone understood what the professor wanted.
The Paper:
- Impeccable data sourcing (World Bank, IMF, peer-reviewed journals)
- Clear, accessible explanations of complex models (I could actually explain them in class)
- Proper citation format (Chicago, because economics lives in the past)
- Delivered 24 hours early, which felt like a gift from the universe

Is it ethical to hire someone to help with a paper outside your major? I've wrestled with this. Plato would probably disapprove. But Aristotle might say we're fulfilling our nature by seeking help when needed.
I've decided: it's okay to ask for help. Especially when the alternative is failing and never taking another philosophy class again.
Verdict: EcoNomist is a 10/10. If you're a humanities person trapped in a social science nightmare, this is your guide.