Or are you?
Are you sure you haven’t left gaps in your argument? Have you anticipated and answered enough objections? Did you leave claims unsupported that ought to be backed by evidence, argument, or citation? And are your citations properly formatted?
Maybe you are sure everything’s fine, or will be once you give it another read. But if you’re not, consider having me edit your work before you turn it in.
As a philosopher and lawyer, I’m a specialist in arguments. Even among philosophers, one of my strengths is my ability to understand an argument on its own terms and raise objections from within its framework.
And of course, like any editor, I can help with word choice and sentence structure, grammar and punctuation.
If your deadline is approaching, be sure to note that it’s a rush project when you fill out my contact form.
A note on academic integrity: It is generally acceptable for graduate work (other than exams) to receive comments before submission, but those who supply comments, including paid editors, should be credited in the acknowledgments or a footnote; specific ideas supplied by an editor require citation like anything else. (Grammatical corrections and similar fixes, of course, do not.) If citing your editor would make you feel nervous, that’s a good sign that you should talk to your professor before using an editor at all. Undergraduates should always check with their professor or teaching assistant before hiring an editor; some professors may not allow it. If you are making a good-faith effort to submit honest work, I am happy to help you correct mistakes in this area by, e.g., pointing out things that ought to be attributed to their sources. But if you attempt to use me to assist in deliberate cheating, I will turn you in, and I will not refund your money. As a former member of the University of Virginia Honor Committee, I take these matters very seriously.